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Peril for Your Thoughts (Mind Reader Mystery) Page 3


  Things were looking up.

  But Jaz’s car was gone. I pursed my lips. Then again, she was an early riser and would be at the boutique already, I reasoned. If last night had happened, she’d still be up in her nookie nook—a Jazism for the loft. Same with a booty-que call being a Jazism for a booty call in her boutique. I cringed. I would have to disinfect the loft all over again if I planned to get anything done up there. If she still let me up there after my little incident. I had my work cut out for me today.

  I shook off those thoughts and decided to remain positive. Today was a whole new day. A day to start fresh. A day filled with infinite possibilities, I thought, having no clue that in a little while today would become one of the worst days of my life.

  I quickly showered, washing my hair three times, and then dressed in yet another practical suit. I already felt more like myself. I rechecked my house three times, making sure the throw pillows were at the precise angle and every knickknack was in its place. I fed Prissy and then headed out the door with a positive outlook.

  Until I ran smack dab into Detective Stevens.

  His bag of groceries and cup of coffee flew from his hands. He wrapped his arms around me and twisted so I landed on top of him as we fell to the hard ground with an oomph. “Whoa, there. You okay?” he asked. Damn she smells so good. Feels good too. Soft curves in all the right places. I just wish—

  “Oh, my God. I don’t want to know.” I quickly rolled off him and sat up, pulling my suit coat down and searching my pockets for my hand sanitizer. I finally found it, and my heart rate slowed as I scrubbed my hands.

  “What’s wrong? You don’t want to know if you’re okay?” He rolled to his feet in his jeans, more casual sport coat, and T-shirt this time, then reached down to help me up.

  “Yeah, that’s it. I’d rather not know.” I scrambled to my feet on my own, sure, now, that last night was definitely not a dream. And he smelled great too. Oh, man, was I in big trouble.

  “Okay, then. I’ll, ah, see you later. I have to feed Wolfgang.” He picked up the bag of groceries and held up the dog food he must have gone to the store for, then scooped up his empty foam coffee cup. “I’ll just grab a cup at the office. By the way, I had your car towed back early this morning. I figured you’d need it for work.”

  “You figured right. Thanks. See you later, Detective Stevens.” Much later, I hoped.

  “It’s Nik,” he hollered after me.

  I scurried to my car before he let Wolfgang out. So much for it all being a dream. I could still read minds, the beast still lived beside me, and Nik the “nice one” had decided to stick around. Where was Nikos when I needed him? This wasn’t a dream at all. It was more like a living nightmare.

  Spring showers I was used to, but today looked like the Heavens were about to open up and shower their wrath upon us. Black clouds, a streak of lightning, a crack of thunder. Why did my gut tell me it was a sign that things were about to get worse?

  My phone rang while I was still sitting in the driveway.

  Glancing at the caller ID, I prayed for strength as I answered. “Before you even get started, I’m okay, Ma.”

  “I want you to come home, right now. Your yiayia Dido is having heart palpitations. You’ll never be able to forgive yourself if you send her to an early grave. She says your papou Homer knows a guy, and your father agrees he comes from good stock. He mostly works with animals, but I know how you don’t like doctors, and—”

  “Ma, stop. Grandma and Grandpa will be just fine, but tell them thanks for me. And tell Pop not to worry. I’m not going to a doctor of any kind. I’m fine. It’s just a bump on the head.” I refused to dwell on it being anything more before I hyperventilated.

  “At least rub some superglue on it and wrap it in Duct tape, or use some of that aloe from the plant I gave you.”

  Superglue and Duct tape were my father’s answers to fixing everything, and my mother swore by aloe as her cure-all.

  “Falling fifteen feet is not just a bump on the head,” she rambled on, not surprising me in the least that she had already heard the details. This town was small, and Ma had eyes and ears everywhere. “Are you out of your mind?” she continued. “You can’t take these things lightly. Remember what happened to your cousin Frona when she fell off the apple wagon? That was only four feet off the ground, and her head swelled to the size of a watermelon. She never was the same after that. There could be something seriously wrong with your brain.”

  I stifled a hysterical laugh and thought, If you only knew.

  She went into a whole monologue about brain injuries, but I stopped listening as the detective walked out the door. He stared up at the sky as the first few sprinkles started to fall, and then he looked at me curiously. I pointed to the phone and rolled my eyes.

  He laughed and gave me the OK sign and a sympathetic look, then climbed into his car. I watched him answer the CB radio thingy, say something, then shoot me an odd look. Seconds later, he disconnected and turned on his lights, then peeled out of the driveway without another look in my direction.

  Well, that didn’t seem good.

  “Ma, I gotta go.”

  “You always gotta go these days.”

  “I promise I’ll make it up to you just as soon as I finish my book of designs. I want to make some progress before I meet my PR person later today. We’re supposed to go over a promotion plan for my new spring line, so they’re pushing me to finish on time. Unfortunately, you can’t rush creativity, and I haven’t exactly had a whole lot of peace and quiet lately.”

  “You would if you lived back home. When are you gonna get a real job and design something respectable lik—”

  “Look at that, my phone is dying. Sorry, Ma. Talk later.” I hung up and pulled out of my driveway, heading toward Full Disclosure. Stealing a move from the detective, I was just about to turn my phone off completely when it rang once more. I glanced down at the ID. Speaking of Full Disclosure …

  Turning on my Bluetooth, I answered the call. “Sorry I’m late, Jaz. I got hung up talking to my mother, but I’m on my way now. Anything wrong?”

  “Everything’s wrong,” she wailed, completely out of character for her.

  “Oh my gosh, what happened? It’s Darrin, isn’t it? I knew there was something off about him. Did he hurt you?”

  “I’m fine … he’s the one who’s not. Oh, my God, it’s so awful.”

  “Jaz, focus. What’s wrong with him?”

  “He’s dead, Kalli. Deader than the doorknob to Disclosure, and they think I killed him.”

  “You can’t seriously think Jaz is the one who killed Darrin,” I said to Detective Stevens later that day at the police station as we sat across from him in his new office with his partner, Detective Boomer Matheson. “You know her,” I added, appealing to the Nik I knew resided within him.

  “Not really,” he replied with an emotion as blank and bland as the white walls in the room. “Look, I’m not saying she did kill the victim, Miss Ballas.” The detective was in full cop mode now, with Nik the “nice one” nowhere to be found as he put forth his best professional side in front of his partner. Go figure. “I’m just saying she was the last person that we know of to see him alive, and he was found dead in her boutique with a bullet to the gut from the same type gun registered in her name. My hands are tied. I have to follow all leads. She has no alibi and admits to being with the victim all night long.”

  Detective Matheson sat on the edge of his desk and grunted over that last comment, obviously not worried about looking professional himself. If this was good cop, bad cop, he was definitely the latter. Of course, it didn’t help that he was one of the many broken hearts Jaz had left in her wake. A decent-looking man with russet-colored hair and hazel eyes, but his personality was seriously lacking.

  Jaz scowled at Boomer and focused on Nik. For the first time since I’d known her, she didn’t look glamorous. She was free of make-up and in a sweat suit. A designer sweat suit, but a sweat suit
nonetheless. She pulled herself together and said, “I’ve had the gun for years. From back in my city days. You must know how it is, being from the city yourself. Small town or not, old habits die hard, Detective.” She blew her nose, genuinely upset. “I keep it behind the register, but it hasn’t been fired since I learned how to use it years ago at a pistol range.”

  “Maybe someone tried to rob her, found the gun, and shot him,” I said hopefully.

  “How could she not hear the gun go off?” Detective Matheson asked, sounding like he didn’t believe a word that came out of her mouth.

  “How could no one else hear the gun go off?” Jaz snapped back. “Besides, we’d had a lot to drink.”

  Again, Boomer grunted. “This is the business district. Most people go to their homes in the residential district to sleep,” he pointed out. “No one would have heard the shot from a puny gun like that.”

  “Normally size matters,” Jaz shot him a fake sympathy look, “but in this case, a gunshot sound is a gunshot sound. Loud and ear piercing.”

  “Kind of like someone else I know,” he countered back.

  “Unless someone was walking or driving through that area in the middle of the night. I don’t think the real killer would have risked it,” Detective Stevens cut in.

  “The throw pillow Jaz sits on behind the register was missing,” I said. “Maybe someone used it as a silencer.”

  He and Jaz both stared at me, looking surprised.

  “What can I say? I’m observant.” I felt my cheeks heat.

  Detective Matheson’s eyes narrowed, and I was sure I didn’t want to know what he was thinking.

  “Okay, fine. I’ve always thought it was highly unsanitary and secretly sprayed it with disinfectant when she wasn’t looking. Same as I do with half the things in her shop.” Jaz gasped, and I winced with a sorry look, then turned my gaze back on Boomer. “I notice things like that. Satisfied?”

  He just grunted again, making some notes—and making me seriously irritated. The man was not very likable.

  “You were saying?” Detective Stevens asked encouragingly, showing the first genuine signs that he really did want to help clear Jaz’s name.

  I clung to that and continued, ignoring Boomer the Butthead. “Anyway, when I got to the store today, I couldn’t stand the mess. There was so much blood.” I swallowed hard, my throat suddenly dry and my skin feeling like it was crawling. I took a breath and continued, “So I did what I always do. I started cleaning, as much as the CSI team would allow, that is. That’s when I noticed the pillow was gone.”

  “Did you move it?” he asked Jaz.

  “Moving my butt pillow was the last thing on my mind last night. Darrin and I headed straight up to my nookie nook—my loft—with a bottle of wine and didn’t come down until this morning. Or at least I didn’t. That’s when I found him lying on the floor by the front door in a pool of blood.”

  “Yet nothing was taken and there was no sign of a break-in, correct?” Detective Stevens checked his notes.

  “Correct. I don’t know how anyone could have gotten in. I just know I didn’t do it.”

  “No gun, either,” said Detective Matheson, taking over. “Like the killer hid it just before we got here. Yet you admit to having the same type of gun that it appears the killer used, which is also missing. Convenient if you ask me.”

  “Why would I admit to that if I killed him with it?” Jaz stood up and started pacing.

  “We would have found that out in time.” Detective Matheson shrugged.

  “Look, I’m cooperating,” she said right in his face. He didn’t even flinch. “I might not have an alibi, but I certainly don’t have motive, either. And I have no idea where the stupid murder weapon is.”

  “Isn’t your MO to meet them, love them, and leave them?” Boomer sneered.

  Given Boomer’s history with Jaz, it wasn’t out of the ordinary for him to make a comment like this. However, the way he used the exact words I’d said to Nik made my stomach turn.

  Jaz shot me a horrified look, and I nailed Nik with a How could you look. He must have repeated what I’d said to his partner. I’d only meant Darrin was her type because he wasn’t the serious sort. Detective Stevens didn’t quite meet my eyes.

  “Hence the word leave them, not kill them,” I sputtered, shooting Detective Matheson a murderous look.

  “We’re just trying to prepare you for what type of questions you’ll be asked. Are you sure you don’t want your attorney present?” Detective Stevens asked quietly.

  Jaz thrust her chin up defiantly. “I have nothing to hide.”

  “Then why didn’t you call 911?” Detective Moron asked, butting in again.

  “I told you I overslept. I woke up to sirens wailing and came down to find Mrs. Flannigan pounding on the front door. She’s one of my regular customers and knew I was having a sale today. She’s the one who called 911. You know the rest.”

  “Are we done here? I think Ms. Alvarez has been through enough for one day. Don’t you think so, Detective?” I shot Detective Stevens a look that said You owe me.

  “Well, I don’t know—” Matheson started to speak.

  “I think you’re right, Miss Ballas. We’re done here,” Detective Stevens said, giving his partner a firm no-nonsense look.

  His partner stared him down, then finally backed off. “Fine. You know the drill. Don’t leave town, Ms. Alvarez. And call us if you can think of anything else. We’ll be in touch.”

  “Oh, don’t worry. I’ve got your number,” she snarled.

  And I had an edge, I thought. I shuffled her out the door as quickly as I could. I truly believed everything happened for a reason. Maybe this mind-reading ability had happened to me at the perfect time. My best friend needed me, and I had access to information others didn’t. Whether it would be admissible in court, or even believable to the average person, didn’t matter. I would find a way around that. I wouldn’t stop until I found a way to clear my best friend’s name. I owed her that much. One thing was certain …

  I wouldn’t stop until I found the real killer.

  CHAPTER 4

  * * *

  “I don’t like her.” My mother rubbed her hands on her olive oil–splattered and spice-stained apron, having sampled most of the menu today alone. What could I say? My family liked to eat.

  “You don’t even know her, Ma.” I sighed, having a sinking feeling that tonight was going to be the longest dinner of my life.

  My new PR person for Interludes, Natasha Newlander, had called earlier, letting me know she had arrived in Clearview. We were supposed to meet for dinner to go over the promotion plan for my new Kalli Originals spring line. Of all the restaurants she could pick, she had to choose my parents’ place, Aphrodite. The goddess of love, beauty, and all things Greek filled every inch of space, with plenty of marble statues scattered about just short of overkill.

  Ophelia Ballas squinted her dark-brown eyes and stared at the overly thin woman who was fashionably late and had made my cousin Eleni seat her at three different tables until she was satisfied. Strike one. She wore her short-cropped dark-red hair slicked back in a sleek style that somehow matched her perfectly tailored purple suit and four-inch heels. Apparently purple was the new “it” color. The woman couldn’t be more than five feet tall and looked as though she hadn’t had a decent meal in weeks. Strike two. Things were not looking good. If she reached strike three, there was no telling what my family would do.

  “Oh, I know her, all right,” my mother said, her Greek accent growing thicker with her irritation. “She’s from that big fancy city that put stars in your eyes, but her kind are no good I tell you. They come in here thinking they are better than the rest of us with their expensive clothes and fat wallets.”

  “She chose your restaurant, so she must have good taste. She can’t be all that bad, right?” Flattery was my only hope of salvaging the evening that had barely started. “All I’m asking is that you give her a chance.”


  My mother’s scowl diminished slightly as she squared her shoulders with pride. Other than me, Aphrodite was the apple of my parents’ eyes. Their firstborn. Something they’d actually birthed on their own. “Well, who wouldn’t like Aphrodite with her beautiful Greek culture on display and food prepared with skill and pride.” My mother’s scowl was back. “If that pointy-nosed bird only orders a salad, I’m throwing her out. Who eats this late at night, anyway? Most people around here are finishing dessert and heading home.”

  “Things are different in the city, Ma. Most people from there are just getting started as you’re heading to bed.”

  “No wonder she can’t eat. That’s horrible for your digestion, and just one more reason why you should never move away from home. That city is not good for you.”

  “I’m not moving there, my designs are. At most I’ll make an occasional trip for business, so you can relax.” I patted her shoulder. It was the closest to a hug I could get.

  Her expression softened. “I’ll relax when you stop hanging around with troublemakers. First, that hussy you work with scandalized everyone with being involved in murder.”

  “Allegedly involved.”

  “Same difference.”

  “Not really.”

  She went on as though I hadn’t even spoken. “Then you start fraternizing with a woman who wants to starve you and take you away from me.”

  “She’s not taking me away from you. She’s helping me launch my new line.”

  “That’s another thing. Your work is fifty shades of embarrassment to this family. Why can’t you be a good girl like your cousins? Settle down, get married, and give me some grandbabies. At the very least get a boyfriend.”

  “Ma, you promised …” I had to force myself not to whine. My mother had a way of bringing out the child in me, and right now I felt like throwing a temper tantrum.

  She threw up her hands and shook her big poof of black teased hair. “All right, all right. I’ll stop for now. Go eat before you faint, Kalliope, but know I’ll be watching that woman. One wrong move, and I’ll—”