
For the purposes of clarity, Good Readahs, I'd like to point out that the timeline of this story opened with a dramatic scene happening on Thursday. The rest of this story is in correct chronological order, so I hope that clears up how we had a jump BACK from Thursday to Monday. Just a dramatic effect, didn't mean to confuse anyone. Thanks--Cinco
MONDAY NIGHT
Grissom leaned on the rail around the lower deck of the Potomac
Princess and toyed with the gold band on his finger. The evening was
clear, but there was a noticeable breeze coming off the water here at
the landing near 13th Street, and after sunset, it would be downright
chilly. He glanced around the other passengers of the paddlewheel boat,
wondering how many of them were checked into the various staterooms
available onboard.
For a brief moment Grissom indulged in the thought of having Miss
Chocolate waiting for him on one of the snug berth beds, perhaps
in black stockings and a mood of smoldering impatience; at
that luscious image, a spasm of lust flashed through his entire frame
and he gripped the rail tightly.
He allowed himself a few seconds of serious hatred for Miss Lollipop.
Then guilt and common sense returned, and Grissom sighed, looking out
across the ruffled water. It didn’t do to hold grudges,
especially when point of fact the woman was right. Candy Shop policy
was emphatic on the issues of non-fraternization, for a myriad of
reasons, not the least of which were compromise, inefficiency and
distraction.
And yet--a nagging voice at the back of Grissom’s mind
pointed out that all three of his missions so far with Miss Chocolate
had been successful, with net gains of over a million dollars in
private fees, hotline payouts and confiscated goods. Further, all three
of Chip Harrington’s ex-wives had covertly donated vehicles
to the Shop, and word was that Macy MacDonald had liked the early
rushes of the porn musical so much that she was finishing it with part
of her own money.
They even had a mascot now, Grissom realized, although the credit for
that probably lay with Gum Drop’s inability to return the dog
to his mother.
Yes, all in all, business AND profit had picked up since he’d
teamed with Miss Chocolate, and despite what Shop policy stated, the
bottom line for the partnership clearly came out in the black.
And THAT was a fact with which even Miss Lollipop couldn’t
argue.
Amused, Grissom idly wondered if he could get an accountant to draft a
counterproposal to Shop policy, and as he pondered that he spotted Mrs.
Willows striding onto the paddle wheeler, nervously clutching her
purse. She looked sleek in her dark sunglasses and tailored cream suit,
and at the same time, her body language broadcast her unease as clearly
as a billboard. Grissom sighed and pushed himself away from the railing
and thoughts of chocolate.
Showtime.
He picked up his briefcase and made a show of checking his watch.
Slowly Grissom made his way along the promenade, moving around the
people milling and admiring the scenery along the Potomac. The Tea Room
was already filling up, and the maitre’d glided back and
forth, directing waitresses and diners to various seats. When it was
Grissom’s turn, he managed a blink at the other man.
“I have an appointment with Mrs. Willows,” he
announced in a distracted voice as he pushed up his thick, black framed
glasses. The maitre’d looked at him, and Grissom pretended to
search the room, pointing with his chin to where she sat.
“There.”
“Ah. If the gentleman will follow me then,” came
the request. Grissom did, toting along his briefcase and arriving at
the table in time to catch Mrs. Willow’s cautious gaze. He
held out his hand to her and gave hers a firm shake.
“Mrs. Willows? I’m Charles Bucket.”
He sat opposite her at the tiny table and the maitre’d moved
off. Mrs. Willows stared at him, her mouth twitching a little.
“Pleased to meet you, Chuck. How are things at the
factory?” came her amused question.
“Actually, I’m associated with the shop,”
Grissom countered smoothly, watching her expression shift from
potential laughter to wariness again. She eyed him more closely now as
he set his briefcase down and adjusted his cuffs, touching the little
gold button links.
“I’ve seen you before,” she announced.
“I know I have, I just can’t put my finger on
it.”
“You’ve seen me twice before, about six weeks
ago,” Grissom agreed in a low, pleasant voice. “I
fumigated the Senator’s townhouse, and later that evening, I
attended your dinner party.”
The light of recognition flared in her eyes and her mouth opened
slightly. “Oh geez—the nerdy professor with the
pregnant trophy wife!”
Looking slightly pained and pleased, Grissom gave a tiny nod. He turned
as a waiter approached them. “I’m deferring to Mrs.
Willow’s preferences here—“
The waiter turned to look at her; unfazed, Catherine gathered up the
menus. “We’ll have coffee—that Sumatran
blend, with sides of cream and sugar thanks, and carrot cake petit
fours,” she ordered smoothly. The waiter nodded, scribbling
on his pad, then moved off. When he’d left, Grissom bent and
fished in his briefcase, pulling out a manila file, handing it to
Catherine.
“What’s this?”
“Camouflage. If anyone spots you and asks later what you were
doing here, you’ve been consulting a lawyer about a property
line dispute with your mother’s house in Nevada,”
he countered. She shot him a brief look of admiration, taking the file
and opening it.
“Smooth. I guess Heather wasn’t kidding when she
said she had connections.”
“Doctor Marazek is exceptionally good at
management,” Grissom agreed with a twinge of annoyance.
Catherine pretended to examine the file for a few seconds, then spoke
under her breath.
“Okay, so who ARE you? And what exactly is the big plan here,
because if you know anything at all about my situation, you probably
also know we don’t have a lot of time or security.”
“I’m one of the people who does what needs to be
done,” Grissom told her simply. “As the nursery
rhyme goes: ‘For every evil under the sun, there is a remedy
or there is none.”
“If there be one, seek till you find it,” Catherine
picked up the thread, “If there be none then never mind it.
Cute . . . but not very helpful.”
Grissom sighed. “Fine. I’m a private agent. Right
now, my job is to pick up whatever information I can about your father
and get it back for evaluation and processing. My understanding was
that you were going to assist me with this.”
For a moment Catherine didn’t speak, but Grissom realized it
was simply because the waiter had returned with their order. Once the
coffee was set before each of them, she drew in a breath.
“Yes, I’ll help. What do you need?”
“Access,” Grissom told her quietly.
“Passwords, keys, phone numbers, connections, even the most
fleeting or innocuous. I’d like to get into his professional
office, his private office, his home office and his car. I want as much
of his financial information as you can lay hands on, along with
anything else you think is pertinent.”
She was nodding, her hands moving to pour the cream into her cup even
as she listened to him. “All right, that I can do. Got a
name, secret agent man?”
“Grissom.”
“Like the astronaut,” came her little probe. He
nodded, sipping his own coffee.
“No relation, actually. So as you can see, I think your
mother has a solid case here . . . clearly the Hendersons are
encroaching on that western side, and the assessor’s
measurements will bear that out,” he finished while the
waiter set down the petit fours. Blinking at the sudden change of
conversation, Catherine nodded belatedly.
“Er, yeah.”
When they were alone again, Grissom carefully slipped her a business
card that read Charles Bucket, C.S, Associates followed by a
phone and fax number. “You can get in touch with me here at
any time. I suggest we find somewhere less public next time. For the
moment, what can you tell me about your father’s normal
routine?”
Catherine sighed. “A lot. You might need
a—“
But Grissom already had a notepad out, and was clicking the pen, poised
to write even as he pushed his heavy glasses up along his nose with the
other hand. Catherine arched an eyebrow at him.
“—piece of paper,” she finished.
“Are you always so prepared?”
Grissom held her gaze for a second, and his voice was low.
“I’m going up against Senator Braun . . .
I’d rather be ready than dead, Mrs. Willows.”
Grimly, Catherine nodded.
TUESDAY MORNING
Sara looked over at Sugar Daddy, who had an expression on his face that
probably mirrored hers. They both looked at Miss Lollipop and waited
for more. She nodded.
“I’m going to die tonight, yes, but it
won’t be fatal. At least, not this time. What I need are a
few mourners and family for the funeral on Thursday, with at least one
of you snooping around a bit to help make it realistic.”
“I’m not sure I’m too crazy about the
realistic part,” Sugar Daddy muttered, eyeing her carefully.
The three of them were strolling through the Candy Shop down under the
Truman Tower building, heading for a conference room. Miss Lollipop
sighed, ushering them inside. She closed the glass doors, picked up a
remote from the polished mahogany table, and punched a button;
instantly a projected image flashed up on a blank wall.
The man in the candid photo sat in a restaurant booth, concentrating on
a stack of waffles. Miss Lollipop spoke up. “Lyle Tarkov. He
looks rather good for a man who died two years ago. And
this—“ she pushed another button on the remote,
“—is Theresa Cornejo, ecdysiast by trade, who
passed away eight months ago. Both of them resurfaced
recently.” The woman on the screen was sunning herself next
to a sparkling hotel pool.
“They look good, for the walking dead,” Sara agreed
cautiously. “What happened?”
“In the beginning, Lyle had a little problem with owing money
to Bruce Eiger. Quite a LOT of money apparently, but Bruce never had a
chance to collect it because Lyle died of a heart attack and was buried
out at Resurrection Gardens. Theresa Cornejo was on the potential
witness list in the Mastrianno trial. She died before prosecutors could
convince her to testify against Max Mastrianno, and she too, was buried
at Resurrection Gardens.”
“I’m sensing a pattern here,” Sugar Daddy
nodded. “An escape clause?”
Miss Lollipop smiled in her mysterious way. “So it seems.
Whoever is running this private relocation program has access to
several databases, since Lyle is no longer in CODIS or AIFIS or the
Social Security system—at least, not the official
databases.”
“That’s . . . scary,” Sara
murmured, blinking a little. Sugar Daddy looked at her and smiled.
“That people are coming back from the dead?”
“That we have our own, more secure databases than the
FBI,” Sara corrected him with a quick grin back.
“But the reanimation is spooky too.”
“It’s troubling, to say the least. Tarkov was
spotted by an old associate, Mr. X, who’d attended
the funeral. When he confronted Tarkov, Mr. X was told
he’d made a mistake. Fortunately, being a suspicious sort he
managed these photos and a DNA sample from a stolen fork which he
brought to us.”
“Thus confirming that Tarkov was back,” Sugar Daddy
nodded. “And?”
Miss Lollipop looked perturbed as she paced under the projected image
of Theresa Cornejo. “And Mr. X has disappeared.”
Sara frowned. “Definitely not good.”
“Definitely. Later in the month we received notice about the
return of Ms. Cornejo when she applied for a job at the Wiggle Room;
our agent there sent her prints through our database for the routine
background check and the results were flagged.”
“The . . . Wiggle Room?” Sara asked dryly.
Miss Lollipop nodded. “One of our more profitable legitimate
businesses. This IS Las Vegas, Miss Chocolate; when in Rome . . .
“
“Yes, well getting back to the matter at hand,”
Sugar Daddy interjected smoothly, “We’ve got two
people back from the dead . . . why worry about it?”
Miss Lollipop paced, her back very straight, the sway of her skirt
almost a flounce. Almost. “Because both of the people who
supposedly died were associated with unscrupulous people, and both had
access to money or information. It’s only a matter of time
before this potentially profitable operation taken over by a bigger
organization, and I for one do not want the Mafia or the Cartels or the
Triad to gain any more power in Las Vegas. Too many deaths would alert
the authorities and eventually compromise the various databases
throughout the federal government.”
No one spoke for a moment; the Sugar Daddy leaned back in his chair and
sighed. “And you have no . . . interest in maybe taking over
this enterprise yourself?” he asked lightly. Miss Lollipop
turned her dangerous gaze on him, and for a moment Sara felt the
undeniable flare of heat between the two. Startled, she blinked at this
sudden insight.
Miss Lollipop folded her arms across her chest. “The thought
DID occur to me, yes. I won’t deny that being able to use it
for beneficial purposes greatly appeals to me. We could help abuse
victims begin new lives, give certain people a second
chance—but ultimately it’s simply too dangerous.
Once the operation at Resurrection Gardens is shut down, perhaps we
here at the Shop can consider a similar, smaller program in the
future.”
“Okay then,” Sara interjected. “So how
exactly did you get information on this place?”
“I spoke at length with Ms. Cornejo, who is currently
enjoying a luxurious house arrest. The details are
here—“ Miss Lollipop handed each of them a flash
drive, “—Study them today, please. Ms. Cornejo
tells me that she’d been ordered NOT to return to Las Vegas,
but apparently the wages for a skin artist are better here than in
Atlantic City.”
“Warmer too,” Sugar Daddy murmured. “So
let’s get back to your death. You’ve already made
arrangements?”
Miss Lollipop nodded. “Under the guise of Delores Morris,
financial manager for Granger Investments, I’ve met with Mr.
Pertonelli, the funeral director of Resurrection Gardens, and given him
the appropriate password. He’s heard at length about my
embezzlement activities and my need to prudently vanish before my boss
takes legal action.”
“And you want me to be your boss?” Sugar Daddy
smirked. Miss Lollipop shook her head.
“I need you to be my husband. And I need you, Miss
Chocolate, to be my sister. That would give both of you a reason to
visit Resurrection Garden. I believe my viewing is going to be on
Thursday, since I’ve conveniently written out all my funeral
arrangements and left them on file. I plan to commit suicide by insulin
overdose—Mr. Pertonelli assures me that will mean a minimal
investigation and no autopsy—and them I’ll be laid
out for viewing, and later taken away for cremation.”
Sugar Daddy winced, his big hands coming up to rest on the table. He
looked at the two women, his gaze coming back to linger on Miss
Lollipop. “I gotta tell you Heather, I don’t like
it, not one damned bit. There’s a hell of a lot of risk
you’re taking with this one.”
“I understand your concern Jim, but I won’t ask
anyone else to die on the job.” She managed a brief,
beautiful smile. “That’s my
privilege.”
Sara nodded, and no one spoke again for a long moment. Then Miss
Lollipop gave a little sigh of dismissal.
As the three of them left the conference room, Miss Lollipop spoke
softly to Sara, “A moment, please?”
Sensing what was coming, Sara obediently followed Miss Lollipop back in
and looked at her as they stood together inside the door. The
other woman kept her gaze level.
“I simply wanted to say that you’ve done an
exceptional job with your last three missions, and should be on
vacation by now. I appreciate your willingness to participate in this
one with me.”
“That’s okay,” Sara replied gently.
“You made a good point about needing to shut down that
pipeline.”
“Yes,” Miss Lollipop nodded. “We need to
move quickly on this one. I also wanted to let you know also that from
now on you’ll be working with Jelly Bean instead of Mr.
Peppermint.”
Sara frowned. “May I ask why?”
“Shop security policy—“ Miss Lollipop
replied blithely. “Very routine. So after we’re
done with Resurrection Gardens I’d like you to take a
vacation. Henry is our in-house travel agent, and he’d be
happy to book you on a trip anywhere you’d like to
go.”
“Um, wow. Thanks,” Sara managed, a little startled
at this largess. Miss Lollipop smiled and moved past her.
“You’ve more than earned it, Sara. I hear
there are some fabulous sales in Paris this time of
year—“
Sara waited for a moment, a smile frozen on her face, and fought her
tiny shiver.
TUESDAY AFTERNOON
Senator Sam Braun looked at the woman standing in the living room and
shook his head in disappointment. “Damn it Sofia, I ask you
to do this ONE thing; a very simple thing and you screw up.”
“I’m telling you Sam, she’s got help.
I’ve been keeping an eye on your daughter off and on for
nearly three years now, and this is the first time she’s ever
given me the slip,” Sofia Curtis grumbled. Sam Braun blinked
at her and picked up his glass of scotch once more.
“She’s a little skittish right now,” Sam
agreed, frowning. “I think it might be time to see if we can
get her back to her old ways. We do that, and I can put her in private
rehab with the full sympathy of the voters.”
“Not coke,” Sofia warned, pacing a bit.
“Pain relievers maybe. The demographics are kinder to
prescription addiction.”
Sam nodded. “Good thinking. So we get her going on Oxycontin
or Vicodin and let her run a while. A non-fatal traffic accident maybe
and I can have a nice little statement to the press about needing some
privacy to deal with this personal tragedy. We could put a decent spin
on it by election time.”
Sofia nodded. “Doable, certainly. It might be nice if you
spent some PR time on drug rehab prior to it all. My people tracked her
on American Airlines through JFK, but she hasn’t shown up at
the townhouse yet. Think she might have checked into the Four
Seasons?”
The senator nodded. “Most likely. She’s avoiding
me, and that gives me a bad feeling.”
The blonde woman nodded slowly. “She’s not stupid,
Sam. The question I
have to ask is—have you been behaving yourself?”
Sam scowled. “That is a dangerous question, Ms.
Curtis.”
She held his gaze. “And that’s the answer I was
afraid of. Let’s not kid ourselves, Senator; I’m
not paid to like you or your vices, I’m here to make sure you
stay in office. So I ask again: have you been behaving
yourself?”
The smile crossing Sam Braun’s face was mild and
grandfatherly; nevertheless, seeing it, Sofia felt her skin crawl.
“Now Sofia . . . a man has to have a vice
or two, don’t you know? Besides, they’ll never
connect me to any of it . . . I’ve been promised
that.”
“Sam—“ Sofia muttered, her eyes
narrowing. The Senator lifted his glass to her in a mock toast.
“All taken care of, honey. Now, don’t you have a
flight to catch? I hear my daughter’s in pain and needs some
decent medicine.”