Death on Demand
Page 22
Annie took both the envelope and her own key and thanked him. She opened the larger envelope. Five folders with oblong cardboard electronic keys were enclosed. She handed the folder for Room 506 to Garrett. “Emma Clyde will pick her key up at the desk.” At least, Emma should—if she would. Annie added calling Emma to her mental list of responsibilities. She tucked the other four folders back into the envelope. “I understand Kenneth Hazlitt is staying here. Has he checked in?”
Jeff stepped to a computer, punched in the name. “Yes. Could I call for you?”
She felt a tiny spurt of irritation. For heaven’s sake, she was hardly a security risk. Jeff knew who she was. He had just funded her the oblong cardboard room keys for five expected guests. To be fair to Jeff, that was different. The Festival was paying for the accommodations for the honorees. And it was contrary to hotel policy to provide inquirers with the room numbers of guests. So okay, Jeff was just following the rules.
“Yes, please.”
Jeff nodded toward an alcove. “The house phones are over there, Annie.”
“Thanks.” She crossed to the alcove, picked up a receiver.
The desk rang the room.
“Hello.” The deep drawl was instantly attractive.
“May I speak to Mr. Hazlitt, please?”
“Which one?”
“Mr. Kenneth Hazlitt.”
“Ken’s not in. This is Willie. Can I help you?”
Damn. Annie looked again at her watch. “I need to speak with Mr. Hazlitt. Do you know when he will return?”
“Who knows? If he’s found a good party, it may be a while. But we’ve got our own little party this afternoon, and a book open house all day tomorrow. You can count on catching him one time or the other. Ken never misses a party, especially not his own.”
“Do you know anything about the book he’s writing?” She had reached that level of desperation.
“Not much,” Willie replied cheerfully. “But I can paw through the stuff we brought. See if I find anything. I think maybe there’re some flyers he’s going to have at the booth. Kind of a teaser, you know? For the open house. Are you press?”
Annie would have claimed membership in the Mafia if she thought it would help. She gave it some consideration (she credited a vicious second-grade teacher with helping her shed any compunction always to tell the truth), but in this instance, she didn’t see any advantage to be gained. “No. I’m a bookseller, and I’m serving as an author liaison.” It sounded official even if it didn’t have a thing to do with Mr. Kenneth Hazlitt’s literary aspirations. “Could I have a flyer?”
“Sure. Come on up. Room 500.”
Annie was halfway across the lobby when she remembered Emma. She scooted back to the alcove, found a pay phone, and dialed Emma’s number. The answering machine picked up. Of course. But Annie knew damn well Broward’s Rock’s most famous author was in her office because Emma’s routine was invariable—a half-hour walk on the beach in front of her palatial home, then three hours at her computer. Neither war nor storms (excepting electrical failures) nor holidays nor celebrations nor illness (unless major surgery) varied Emma’s writing schedule.
Annie enunciated loudly and clearly. “Emma, the Medallions are strictly on the up-and-up. I’ve got the word straight—”
Emma picked up her phone. “From whom?”
“Blue Benedict. She swears that Hazlitt guy had nothing to do with your selection. So you’ll come, won’t you?”
The silence was frosty—and thoughtful. Emma’s voice was as cool and sharp as a dueling sword. “If that’s true, it makes Kenneth’s novel even more interesting.”
And she hung up.
Annie glared at the phone. The public might adore dear Marigold Rembrandt (“… America’s sweetest and canniest sleuth,” The New York Times. “ … delights readers with her warmth and charisma,” Chicago Sun-Times. “ … won the hearts of readers from coast to coast,” the Los Angeles Times), but her creator had about as much charm for Annie as the seven-foot alligator that lived in the pond behind Annie’s home. Annie knew dangerous beasts when she saw them.
Annie slammed the receiver into its cradle, jolting her fingers. “Ouch.”
All the way up in the elevator, Annie tried to figure it out Why did it make Hazlitt’s novel more interesting? Or was Emma being supercilious?
And did Annie really give a damn?
Well, yes. She was responsible for the care and feeding of the honorees and their mental well-being throughout the Festival. So, yes. But she didn’t understand what Emma meant …
The elevator doors opened, and Annie confronted her own image in a huge mirror with a gilt baroque frame.
She had that instant of surprise that always came when seeing her reflection. Sandy hair. Gray eyes. Slim, athletic figure.
Annie paused.
Laurel always urged Annie to relax, to imbibe more deeply from Life’s Fountain of Joy.
Annie thought the message was clear. She frowned. Dammit, did she really look harried and intense?
She forced her shoulders to relax. Actually, she looked stylishly resortish, her smooth cotton top crisply white, her light blue chambray skirt long enough to swirl. Annie smoothed her hair and tried a casual smile. Okay.
The door to Room 500 opened immediately.
Annie looked into amused green eyes that widened with perceptible pleasure as they surveyed her.
“Do come in, said the lonely guy to the good-looking girl.” His voice was a pleasant baritone, and he used it to matinee-idol perfection. He thrust out his hand. “Hi, I’m Willie Hazlitt, and my crystal tell tells me you’re the author liaison who just called. I had no idea author liaisons were beautiful. What a delightful surprise.”
Willie’s hand was warm, his grin seductive.
Annie smiled, but with definite reserve. She knew all about the Willie Hazlitts of the world. Good-looking, charming, playful. And not to be trusted with either the household silver or a woman’s reputation.
“Hello, Mr. Hazlitt. I appreciate your help.” The room behind him was nice. Lots of white wicker and brightly striped pillows and a seashell motif in the sand-shaded wallpaper. If all the suites were this attractive, her authors should at least be pleased with their accommodations.
“Anything I can do, anything at all. And my name’s Willie.” He looked at her expectantly.
“Annie Darling. Now, this flyer—”
“Sure, sure, Annie.” He led the way into the living area. “Let me take a look in these boxes.”
Willie Hazlitt made it look easy to heft four big cartons onto a table near the wet bar. He was about six feet tall, with broad shoulders and muscular arms. He was also so spectacularly handsome—thick, smooth black hair, regular features, a smile that combined charm with a hint of wickedness—that not even his vivid sport shirt—emerald-beaked, crimson-feathered toucans against a bright fuschia background—could compete with his looks. And it would take a man inordinately confident of both his appearance and his masculinity to wear that particular shirt.
He kept up a nonstop chatter as he poked through the boxes. “… more than you ever wanted to know about the fall list from Mint Julep Press: Red Hot Tips from Hot Rod Hal, Blue Grass in My Old Kentucky Home, Press the Pedal to the Metal—huh, now that sounds like fun, the memoirs of a long-haul trucker—Sea Island Reverie—oh, poems. I thought it might be a primer on how to have your very own little grass shack, which I could relate to, ma’am”—here he favored Annie with a bright, not too suggestive glance—“Root Hog or Die, which I do not relate to. Well, not this box, I guess. Let’s see.” He pushed the first box away, pulled the second one close. “Nope. This one’s got party stuff in it, nuts—the house-brand peanuts from a discount store—you can count on Ken to cut corners wherever, oh yeah,” Annie heard a remnant of a southern drawl, but she guessed Willie had spent some years elsewhere, “and paper plates, that kind of stuff. Now here’s a box that’s taped shut. That’s special for the open house. Can�
��t get into those yet But I know there’s a bunch of other flyers. Unless he’s already taken them to the booth. He’s really on a high about his book.” A shrug. “My brother publishes books—I mean, we do. You’d think it would just be another day at the office. But no, Ken’s beside himself.”
Willie delved into the last box and, triumphantly, yanked up a stack of sheets so electrically pink that Annie blinked.
“Here we go.” He handed one to Annie.
Annie took the sheet.
Annie took a deep breath. Oh, Lordy.
“Would you like extra copies?” Willie asked helpfully.
“Five.”
Before pulling the brochures from the box, she saw him glance at her wedding ring.
Annie took the flyers. “Thanks so much.”
“Oh, we’ve got hundreds. We’ll have a stack of them here this afternoon at the cocktail party.”
“Who’s coming to the cocktail party?”
“Ken sent out invitations to booksellers. But you’re definitely invited. Five o’clock. Here in the suite. And feel free, take some extra copies of the flyer.”
All Day Saturday, the White Ibis Room, the Buccaneer Hotel
Come to Mint Julep Press’s
GRAND CELEBRATION
SEE MINT JULEP’S FALL LIST
and
Discover how much TRUTH there can be in fiction.
Kenneth Hazlitt will reveal the inspiration for his forthcoming novel:
SONG OF THE SOUTH
The story of five famous Southern novelists and the passions (some illicit!) that have dominated their lives and changed their fiction.
SONG OF THE SOUTH
will be the talk of the South. Come find out more.
And take advantage of deep discounts available only during the Festival in ordering
Mint Julep Press Fall Titles.
Willie smiled happily, obviously unaware his offering was as welcome as the Bud light truck at a Baptist church social.
Annie accepted another handful. Should she give flyers to her authors as they arrived? Or should she await a propitious moment?
She turned toward the door.
Willie didn’t exactly block her way, but he was right there, an eager hand on her elbow. “How about a drink tonight?”
“I’m not sure,” she replied vaguely, “but thanks.”
“Anytime. Just give me a ring.”
He leaned against the doorjamb and watched as she walked toward the elevators.
As Annie punched the button, she gave him a final, noncommittal smile. Willie probably preferred married women. She stepped into the elevator, the pink sheets in her hand, and wished that she had nothing else to do that day but fend off Willie’s advances. That she could do. Duck soup. Instead, she had a horrid premonition that her Gang of Five might make mincemeat out of her. She opened her purse and absently dredged up a partially squashed mint.
No, stress didn’t make her hungry, fill her mind with images of food.
Of course not.
DEATH ON DEMAND
A Bantam Crime Line Book/February 1987
All rights reserved
Copyright © 1987 by Carolyn G. Han.
No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted many form or by any means, electronic or mechanical including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
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eISBN: 978-0-307-57454-1
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