Saving Grace (What Doesn’t Kill You, #1): A Katie Romantic Mystery

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Saving Grace (What Doesn’t Kill You, #1): A Katie Romantic Mystery Page 47

by Pamela Fagan Hutchins

Chapter Forty-five

  Rashidi and Crazy Grove beat us out to Annalise, but not by much. Rashidi made introductions all around.

  “Why don’t you let Mr. Wingrove and me speak for a few minutes,” I said. “You guys can catch up on things.” I wanted to give Ava a chance to talk to Rashidi alone, more than I wanted to talk to Grove alone.

  “Good idea,” Rashidi said, and he pulled Ava under his arm, guiding her toward the front steps. The dogs followed him, except for Oso. Oso had figured out where his dog biscuit was buttered.

  I stayed on the side of the house with Mr. Wingrove. “So, do you want me to call you William or Wingrove?” I asked, not wanting to offend him with overfamiliarity.

  “Call me Crazy, miss. It helps with my reputation. Keeps the men dem on their toes.”

  I liked this guy. We talked about expectations for a while, mine and his. We walked the house together and discussed the work I wanted done. He made some good suggestions and roughed out a timeline and costs for me. He didn’t make any pretty promises. Oso sidled up to him and Crazy scratched the dog’s head while he talked to me. As we finished, we walked around to the front steps and joined Ava and Rashidi, where they were sitting side by side. Her head was on his shoulder and her arm was through his, and his other hand was covering hers.

  “It’s a big job,” Crazy was saying, “And some of the men dem afraid to work at the jumbie house.”

  “Oh, come on, now. This isn’t a jumbie house,” I said. I crossed my fingers behind my back.

  Crazy cackled. “Yah, right. What I telling my men dem is the jumbie a good crazy, like me. She really save that boy what fell out here?”

  “If one believed in jumbies, then it would be possible to conclude that a jumbie rendered some aid to the young man in question.” I winked.

  He winked back. “Always good to have spirits dem on your side.”

  We shook hands on that.

  Rashidi and Ava stood up. Rashidi said, “Katie, your dogs have ticks. Bad ticks. Crazy and I gonna take them into town to the vet or they get the tick fever. I shoulda had them treated before I brought them out here.” He flashed me his lady-killer grin. “The rainforest ain’t for the weak, meh son.”

  “Yah mon,” I answered. I leaned down and parted the fur on Cowboy’s back. Urp. A tick. I gave him a push toward Rashidi. “Be my guest, and thank you.”

  Rashidi imparted one last nugget of information. “I see a blue Silverado truck earlier parked over in the old Rasta village ‘cross the road, right before you and Ava got here. I went to check it out and it drove away fast.” Rashidi grimaced. “You and Ava need to get on home now, soon as you can. Junior not happy with you.”

  A ball of nerves formed in my stomach. “Thanks, Rashidi. We’re leaving right behind you.”

  We walked the men back around to Rashidi’s Jeep, into which he somehow loaded six dogs and two men. Rashidi saluted us, then he and Crazy drove off, calling out more farewells and waving from their cramped quarters as they drove away.

  The wind had picked up. Ava pushed her hair back and held it out of her face. “Walker still coming?”

  Damn. I had forgotten about him. “Yes, any time now.”

  I sagged against the outside side wall of the house, taking care not to scrape the backs of my sunburned arms against the stucco. I was tired to the bone.

  I read an incoming text. “Could I make you my world famous Chilean sea bass tonight?” Bart.

  I had been keeping Bart at bay for two days. I wanted nothing more than to go back to Ava’s place and sleep round the clock. But I’d made more than just a resolution not to drink out on that beach this morning. I had resolved to let this happen with Bart, whatever this was. Starting now. I could drink a Red Bull. Or three.

  “I’d love it,” I sent.

  I calculated the time it would take to finish with Walker, get home, shower, beautify, and drive to Bart’s place, which he’d said was in Town.

  I sent another text. “Can we make it 7:30?”

  Ava spoke. “How it go with Crazy?”

  “Good, thank God. I’m so grateful to Rashidi right now, and ready to see the last of that damn Junior.”

  “Me, too.”

  Ava reached into her purse and pulled out the envelope of pictures we’d printed at the Packin’ Male in between eyeballing the two cute young Puerto Rican guys that ran it. They wore Levi’s and white t-shirts with their sleeves rolled up in a 50s style. The store had been hopping, and conspicuously absent of straight men.

  I followed Ava around the house to the garage, where I’d parked the truck earlier. Normally, the garage was full of dogs, who liked to watch the road from their spots on the cool cement floor and beg at the door for food, but not now. The truck’s back end was sticking out of the garage a few feet. OK, maybe I hadn’t parked it in the garage, more like in and out of the garage.

  Ava lowered the tailgate, then put her hands flat on it as she jumped and spun, planting her rump solidly. I joined her on her perch, repeating her move but less gracefully. I angled my face up to the sky and let the fingers of the breeze caress my face.

  “It’s five minutes until six. If Walker doesn’t come by ten minutes after, let’s head out,” I said.

  Ava didn’t answer. She was rifling through the pictures and muttering to herself as she stared at each one. I leaned in so I could see, too.

  “I don’t think Guy had any idea Lisa was cheating on him,” Ava said as she flipped through the pictures. “He pretty self-important. He sweet, but he saw himself as the one that could, and everyone else those that couldn’t.”

  She locked in on a picture, rapt.

  I took in the picture that had Ava’s attention. Lisa getting out of the car at Gregory’s place. I adopted a terrible accent and said, “I guess that make her the wutliss one.”

  Ava snorted. “Don’t try that accent out in public. People laugh at you. But what make you say that?”

  I concentrated for a moment. Nothing came to me. I relaxed my mind and closed my eyes. The answer floated in, soft as dandelion fluff blown by a child. “Walker told me that Guy was as worthless as the shirt he was wearing when he died. Except he said wutliss, just a lot better than I did.”

  Ava squinted at me in the late afternoon sun. “He say exactly that?”

  “Yes, why?”

  “It strange, that all. When I find Guy in his hotel room,” she paused, “dead, he wearing a t-shirt from a local band popular years ago. They called Wutliss. His shirt literally say ‘Wutliss Crue’ on it.”

  “I thought it was an odd thing for him to say, too, but I guess that explains what Walker meant.”

  But it didn’t, really. Not completely anyway. My scalp started to tingle like it did when my brain was wrestling with a problem.

  Ava shook her head slowly, then faster. “I don’t think so. I see all the news. All of it. There no pictures of Guy from the room, where he die, I mean.”

  She shuffled through more pictures, then stopped shuffling to talk again. “The police knew, though. And I think he tight with someone up there. I mean, otherwise, why the assistant chief refer you to him in the first place. Right?”

  I didn’t answer. I couldn’t. I was looking at the picture in her lap. It was one I took of the brown Continental. A good photo, one that showed its ridiculous vanity license plate, NYPD BLEW. The picture was so good, in fact, that it left no doubt that it was the same car as the one pulling in the drive of Annalise right that second.

  I grabbed the pictures from Ava. “Look at the car,” I hissed. “It’s here, right now. Come on.”

  Ava looked at the picture, then the car, and jumped to her feet. I did, too, and ran around to the driver’s side of my truck and opened it. My hands shook so violently that I fumbled the door before I could get it open. I leaned into the cab and shoved the pictures into my purse and hugged it to me. You must calm down, I coached myself. I willed my heart to slow its pace, for the heat in my face to cool, for the red splotches I knew
were there to disappear.

  Ava was right behind me. “What we gonna to do?” she whispered.

  “Let’s go in the house. Just act naturally. Don’t say a word about any of this, about our day, nothing, OK?”

  I put my hand on her shoulder to give her a twist and push in the right direction. I could hear the car now as it pulled up the driveway to the house. The engine shut off. The door opened. Feet hit the ground. By then, we were in the kitchen. “Into the great room,” I said in Ava’s ear. “Let me see who it is.”

  “Anyone home?” a voice called out. A familiar voice. Whoever it was, he was headed our way.

  ~~~

 

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