Murder Between the Covers dj-2
Page 16
“Don’t have what?” A deputy walked by. Helen realized she was almost shouting into the phone.
“The video. That horrible sex video.” Peggy was crying harder now. Helen had trouble understanding her. “It would have destroyed me, but the fight wasn’t about me. It was about two powerful men. I was caught in their cross fire.
Page Turner never blackmailed me. I wasn’t important enough.”
Peggy stopped and began plucking at a loose string on her top until Helen thought she would scream. “Tell me, Peggy. Please.”
Peggy wiped her eyes and took a deep gulping breath.
“You know about the video with the cocaine and Senator Hoffman’s son.”
Helen nodded.
“There was some ugly stuff on that video. Not just the sex. Collie hated his father. He said things like, ‘My father’s big on law and order—for other people. When I get caught, he calls in his fixers. If I did crack in Homestead instead of coke in Lauderdale, they’d lock up my ass and throw away the key.’ ”
“And he said this while snorting the white stuff?” Helen said.
Peggy nodded. “There was a lot more. It’s like he made this tape to get even with his father. And then... there was the sex. You must think I’m a real slut.” She was picking at the loose thread again.
“I think you’re my friend, and I’m sorry you’re in this mess.”
Peggy quit torturing the thread. “Collie’s death was my wake-up call. I went into rehab and got Pete and played the lottery.”
She laughed bitterly. “Doesn’t sound like much of a life, does it? But I was happy. Or at least I didn’t hurt anymore.
Then Gayle found out that Page was planning to use the tape to ruin Senator Hoffman. She warned me.”
“Gayle? How did she know?”
Peggy shrugged. “She must have overheard something at the bookstore.”
“Why would Page do that? Was he drunk or crazy?”
“Neither,” Peggy said. “Senator Hoffman cost Page Turner several million dollars. He talked him into investing in some energy stock.”
“Enron?”
“No, that’s not the name. But it tanked like Enron. Unfortunately, the senator neglected to tell Page to sell the stock when it started diving. Page lost about three million.
He was going to have to close the bookstores because of the losses. He’d used their working capital.”
Finally, the store closings made sense. The stores weren’t losing money. Page had taken their cash and blown it on bad investments.
“He’d embezzled from the stores.”
“Well, he owned the stores, so I don’t know if you’d call it embezzling. But the family wasn’t going to bail him out.
Gayle said they hushed it up, but he was stuck with the losses.
“Page tried to get the senator to cover his losses, but Hoffman said he couldn’t do anything about it. That’s when Page vowed to ruin him by turning that tape over to the press. It would make the senator a laughingstock.”
“Right,” Helen said. “Hoffman’s running on a family-values, anti-drug platform. If the voters saw his coke-snorting son saying what a hypocrite he was, the senator couldn’t run for a bus.”
“Page hoped to get his money back by threatening Hoffman with the tape. But it would also ruin my life. I’d be a national joke, worse than Monica Lewinsky. At least she didn’t have sex with a man who turned up dead the next day. I’d kill myself before I went through a scandal like that. I called Page and tried to appeal to his better instincts.”
“So you picked him up at the bookstore,” Helen said.
“I told him it wasn’t fair. I would be destroyed because he was angry at the senator. Page laughed at me. He said this was payback for when I ran into the store in my nightgown.”
“And then what?”
“I knew it was hopeless,” Peggy said. “He got that cell phone call. I drove him back to the bookstore. I hated him.
I wanted him dead.
“Then someone who hated Page even more killed him and left him to rot in my bed.”
Chapter 18
“Wanna dance on the table with gorgeous men?” Sarah said when Helen answered the bookstore phone.
“Best invitation I’ve had all day,” Helen said. “Where are these dancing men?”
“They’re the waiters at Taverna Opa, a Greek restaurant in Hollywood. The female servers are good-looking too, but they’re not my type. Anyway, the staff dances with the diners on the tabletops. The music is loud, the food is good, and the male waiters look hot in tight white T-shirts. It’s tough getting a table on the weekends, but tonight we should have no problem.”
“I have a problem,” Helen said. “I don’t have any money.”
“Oh, come on. You can afford an appetizer and a drink.
You’re turning into a mope.”
“Sarah, I’d love to go, but when my hours were cut, so was my pay.”
“So let me buy.”
“No,” Helen said. “I’ll pay my own way, or not go at all.”
“This isn’t charity. It’s friendship.”
“Friends should be equals,” Helen said.
“It’s just money,” Sarah said, irritated. “Look, it’s ten a.m. Call me if you change your mind.”
Did she slam down the phone, or did Sarah? Helen used to think it was just money, back when she made six figures. Now that she had to struggle, she knew money gave you peace of mind and independence. (But not happiness, a voice whispered. It gave you a lying, cheating husband.)
Helen sighed and looked around at the nearly empty bookshelves. With no new books coming in, the shelves were growing bare. The booksellers had covered the empty spaces by turning the books face-out, like the letter tiles in a Scrabble game. It worked for now. But as those books sold, Helen wondered what they would do. Maybe the store would be closed by then. She had to keep looking for a job.
At lunch, Helen ate a Luna bar, bought a cup of coffee, and went out for a free paper. She found a bench under a palm tree and read the want ads. The only jobs that paid anything were for telemarketers, and Helen hadn’t stooped that low. Yet.
Then she saw something promising: Watch this spot for the job jamboree at Down & Dirty Discounts. The new Triple D on Federal Highway near Broward opens soon.
Jobs galore for eight dollars an hour and more.
Good money within walking distance. The upstart Down & Dirty was giving Wal-Mart a run for its money. Helen would apply for a job as soon as the stores started accepting applications. She walked back to work with a spring in her step, admiring the warm blue sky, the pink and red impatiens blooming around the tree trunks. She saw something greenish gray on the sidewalk. Wait! Was that what she thought it was? Did someone drop a dollar? She bent down and picked up— A hundred-dollar bill! Half a week’s pay was at her feet.
Helen couldn’t believe her luck. The most she’d ever found had been a Georgia quarter. Now Ben Franklin was smiling coyly at her. The redesigned currency made the founding father look like a Grateful Deadhead. She wanted to kiss him.
She saw two young men elbowing each other and thought, They want my hundred. They’re going to say they dropped it. Helen wasn’t going to let anything happen to her windfall. She shoved the bill into the inside zip pocket of her purse, then hurried into Page Turners to call Sarah.
“God wants me to go to Taverna Opa,” she told her friend.
“The devil is more like it,” Sarah said.
“Nope. God must be a woman. She put a hundred-dollar bill right in my path, so I can see the natural beauties of Florida. Take me to Taverna Opa.”
“I’ll pick you up at seven,” Sarah said.
Just the thought of that much free money was liberating.
Helen felt inspired. She would save Peggy. She would find out who killed Page Turner. She’d love to pin Page’s murder on the preppy prowler, Harper Grisham IV. But he wouldn’t give her the time of day, much less tell her where he was th
e night Page died. There had to be a way to make him tell her.
“Son of a bitch,” said Brad the bookseller, as he came back from lunch. “I got a twenty-dollar ticket. All because this place is too cheap to give us free parking.”
Parking was scarce on Las Olas. The lot behind the bookstore cost four dollars an hour. Most booksellers were not about to spend half their pay on parking. Instead, they found free parking five or six blocks away.
“What happened?” Helen said.
“The ticket says I was in a no-parking zone,” he said. “I didn’t see the yellow paint on the curb. First my hours were cut, now this. I don’t know how I’ll make the rent.”
The little bookseller’s shoulders were hunched, and his head hung down in defeat.
“I’m sorry, Brad,” she said. But Brad’s misfortune was her gain. She knew now how to question the preppy prowler. It was risky. If he had caller ID, she would be fired, but this job wouldn’t last much longer anyway.
When there was a lull in the customers, she asked Brad to cover for her and headed for the break room. She dialed Senator Hoffman’s Tallahassee office and said, “Hello, may I please speak to Mr. Harper Grisham?”
After a brief wait, his arrogant voice was on the phone.
“This is Harper Grisham.”
Helen held her nose to make her voice nasal. “This is the city of Fort Lauderdale,” she said. “You have an unpaid parking ticket for two hundred dollars, plus fifty dollars in court costs and overdue fines. We are issuing a bench warrant for your arrest.”
“You’re joking,” Grisham said. His voice was relaxed, affable, as befit a future ruler of the free world.
“I am completely serious, sir,” Helen said, still pinching her nose. “The ticket was issued June second at eight p.m.
You were ticketed a second time at eleven-thirty p.m. for non-removal of your vehicle.” She was making up the charges as she went along.
“I was in Tallahassee that night at a rally for Senator Colgate Hoffman,” Grisham drawled. “I can have my office send you a news clip that shows me on the platform.”
Suddenly the affability was gone, and there was a lash in his voice. “But if I have to do that, I’ll have your job, you incompetent moron. What is your name?”
Helen hung up and let go of her nose.
The preppy prowler wasn’t guilty of murder. Too bad.
Helen would have loved to administer that lethal injection herself. She wondered how she was going to help Peggy now.
Sarah pulled up in her green Range Rover at seven on the dot, wearing a green linen Ralph Lauren pantsuit that set off her curly brown hair, and square-cut emeralds at her ears and throat.
Helen whistled. “Wow, you look good. Mind being seen with me?” She was suddenly ashamed of her clunky bookstore shoes.
“You look fine,” Sarah said. “But if you want to change your clothes, I can take you home first.”
“Naw, I’ll just slip off my shoes if I dance on the tabletop. Ben Franklin is burning a hole in my pocket. Let’s eat, my treat.”
The line for Opa was out the door at seven-thirty. “Not bad,” said Sarah. “On the weekends, the crowd is lined up across the parking lot.”
In fifteen minutes, they were inside, where they were hit with a blast of Greek music. It seemed to vibrate off the floor and slam into the ceiling. A twenty-something waiter who looked like a Greek James Dean was dancing on the table with a woman of forty. She was shaking her hips like an exotic dancer, and he was matching her move for move.
Everyone at the table was cheering—except for one surly-looking man. Her husband? Helen wondered.
Across the room, a woman server of about twenty was dancing on a long table with a white-haired man of seventy, while his family yelled “Opa!” and applauded. His moves were stiff and too slow for the music, but he looked so happy Helen laughed out loud.
The host showed Helen and Sarah to a table on an open gallery running along the main room. It had a view of the water on one side and the table dancing on the other. Suddenly, the dance was over, and the waiters went back to running drinks and hauling huge trays of food.
The dark-haired James Dean brought a wooden bowl of chickpeas to their table and, using a pestle, mashed them into hummus. Helen and Sarah spread it on crusty bread. It was strong with garlic.
“This is good,” Helen said.
With the hundred burning a hole in her pocket, she ordered lavishly: caviar spread, roast lamb, grilled sea bass, Greek salad with snowdrifts of feta cheese, lots of wine to cut the olive oil.
Periodically, the waiters would jump on the wooden tables on the main floor and start dancing. One or two brave diners would join them, while their friends clapped and hooted.
“Are you going to dance?” Helen asked Sarah.
She looked at their wobbly plastic table and said, “Do you really think this will support me?”
“How about the wooden tables in the main area?” Even now, a sizable woman was shaking her hips over plates of moussaka.
“Right,” Sarah said. “I can see me now. ‘Excuse me, sir.
Could you move your sea bass? I’d like to climb on your table and dance with your hunky waiter.’ ”
Helen laughed. “It’s a spectator sport for me, too.”
They talked and laughed and ate until Helen felt better than she had in months. It was fun to have money again, even for one night. Over strong black coffee and sweet flaky baklava, Sarah asked, “How are your efforts to save Peggy going?”
“Not so good. Everything I find out just makes it worse.”
She told Sarah about Peggy’s job and the videotape. “I’m a little hurt, too. Why didn’t Peggy tell me anything about herself?”
“She probably didn’t want to look bad. You’re a good person, Helen. One look at you, and you can tell you don’t do drugs or know anything about the police. Peggy was probably ashamed of her old life and thought you wouldn’t understand.”
She doesn’t suspect, Helen thought. None of them do. If I told Sarah I was on the run, hiding from my ex and the courts, she wouldn’t believe me. What right do I have to be hurt by Peggy hiding her past? What have I told her or Sarah about me?
“I want to help her,” Helen said. “But I’m spinning my wheels. Today, I found out the preppy prowler had a decent alibi. I would have loved to pin it on him.”
“Don’t give up,” Sarah said. “You have a lot of work to do. You have to check the alibis of anyone in the bookstore who wanted to kill him.”
“That’s a lot of people, Sarah. I can’t just ask them, ‘Where were you the night Page Turner died?’ ”
“You won’t have to. It’s like love. Just let it happen naturally.”
“I’ve not had much luck in love, either,” Helen said.
“How are things going with your contractor?”
Helen was irritated that Sarah wouldn’t say Gabriel’s name. “Just fine. I’m taking it slowly. We had coffee at the café. He’s taking me to the Shakespeare festival on Sunday to see A Midsummer Night’s Dream. ”
“You know any more about him?”
“I know a man who likes Shakespeare is a rare find in Florida.”
“Just because a man likes culture doesn’t make him a good person. Hitler loved art and opera.”
“Sarah! Are you comparing Gabriel to Hitler?”
“No, I’m just telling you to be careful. This is South Florida.”
“Anything else, ladies?” said their James Dean waiter.
His white T-shirt was sweaty from his last dance. It clung to his muscular torso, revealing well-developed pecs. Helen thought of a few answers to his question, but said, “It’s time for the check.”
The bill for their meal was $79.82. That was the end of her hundred-dollar bill, she thought. But it was a glorious meal and an entertaining evening, except for Sarah’s last lecture. And her friend did care about her. She was just overly concerned. Maybe Sarah needed a date, Helen thought.
/> She pulled out the hundred-dollar bill from the zippered compartment where she’d stashed it. It felt odd. Lighter or thinner or something. Helen looked at it in the waning evening light. No, that was definitely Ben Franklin. The man may have said a penny saved is a penny earned, but he looked happy on a hundred.
But the bill felt wrong. Helen turned it over. The back side was blank white paper. Printed in heavy black ink was Sucker!
Helen felt the blood drain from her face. She thought she was going to lose her hundred-dollar dinner. Suddenly, the scene with the two young men nudging each other took on another meaning. They didn’t want her bill. They were laughing at her. She was a stupid greed-head.
Sucker! indeed.
“Helen, are you OK? What’s wrong?”
Helen showed her the fake hundred-dollar bill. Sarah burst out laughing. “It’s a color Xerox copy. I’ve heard of these. They’re the latest scam. Crooks have been putting them on high-grade paper and passing them off as real bills to busy cashiers. Some copies are good enough, if they aren’t inspected too closely. This one is not bad. Leaving the fake bill on the sidewalk is a new twist. Trust Florida to invent it.” Like many residents, Sarah seemed proud of the endless creativity of the local scam artists.
“I feel like such a fool,” Helen said. “I only have two dollars.” She apologized until Sarah begged her to stop.
“Forget it,” she said. “It was worth the entertainment value.” She whipped out her credit card and cheerfully paid the bill, leaving a generous tip. “Ready to go?”
Helen nodded. Sucker! the fake bill screamed at her.
Helen tore it up.
But she felt like the word was branded on her forehead.
Chapter 19
“Excuse me, I need some help here.”
A lean woman with bad skin and dead-black hair plunked four paperbacks down on the counter at Helen’s register. They weren’t the usual women’s reading: Letters to Penthouse XIV, XV, XVI, XVII.
“I’m not sure this is what I want,” she said. “I need a book on talking dirty. Can you see if you have any books like that?”