“Alch, I want your mouth shut on everything for now. Tell command I’ve had a relapse. Pneumonia, but I refuse to go to a hospital. The Iron Maiden strikes again. Infectious. Home nursing care.”
“Can’t I help besides a cover story?”
“You’ve done enough. Keep it shut and I’ll be forever grateful, if maybe not useful to your career.”
“Barr.” She eyed Temple as sternly as an underling, and sighed. “You’ll be doing your Zoe Floozy Ozone routine. Get your gear and act together. I’ll be at your Circle Ritz place in about four hours and I won’t be in a good mood. We may have to drive all over that audition map on the weasel’s Web site, L.A., Albuquerque, Flagstaff, so take a week’s worth of stuff along, including your cell phone, laptop, and Elvira, Mistress of the Dark, black wig. And the usual chutzpah.”
“That’s it? That’s all I know?”
“You’ll be briefed plenty en route.”
“What about him?” Alch nodded down the hall to the self-absorbed Buchanan, who was repeatedly roughening his gelled hair so it stood up in porcupine spikes. He looked like a spiny sea urchin rather than a cool dude.
“Let him go,” she told Alch, “with the notion that he’s under twenty-four-hour observation and needs to be available on an instant’s notice, which he will be and does.”
“All right, but Lieutenant.” Alch eyed Temple uneasily. “What about . . . DL?”
For a moment Molina managed to look utterly blank. As if Temple Barr wouldn’t guess Alch was referring to Dirty Larry. Then she got decisive.
“For now, tell DL I’m on compassionate leave and I’ll be in touch.”
“But, Carmen!”
She stared him down.
“Right, boss. And someone’s been holding on the landline for you. Wouldn’t hang up.
“I don’t need ‘someone’ distracting me right now.”
Alch shrugged. “You never know. He sounded pretty intense. Might have seen Mariah.”
Molina sighed theatrically, winced at what such a deep breath did to her pain threshold, and stomped into the kitchen, Alch trailing her.
She paused to turn that basilisk gaze on Temple.
“Better get going fast. I’ll come by the Circle Ritz sooner than you’d like. You don’t want to forget a false fingernail that Ms. Ozone requires, so you can mentally pack on the drive home. And tell them at the Ritz, including your light of love, Matt Devine, you’re visiting relatives for a few days. We’re going on the road.”
Shotgun Reunion
Carmen Molina was definitely starting to believe in karma.
The “intense” voice Alch had heard on the kitchen phone was indeed known to her.
“What’s this about Mariah?” it asked.
Rafi’s voice was loud and clear so it would carry over the clink, clang, and conversation of a hotel casino.
“How’d you hear about it at the Oasis?” Molina asked.
“Private cops monitor police radio bands. I heard ‘kid.’ Alch radioing he was on the way. I heard ‘missing.’ And I got a chill up my spine.”
There was no point in dodging this very unpleasant bullet.
“Your spine is right. Mariah’s gone off on some stupid kid quest for ‘stardom.’ All her own idea from the evidence, but we don’t want her preyed upon.”
“Preyed upon? She’s already missing! Jesus, Carmen, how’d you screw up this badly? I thought at least you were a good mother, that you of all people would know the score when it came to responsibly supervising a teenager.”
That “at least” stung more than she should have let it, but she was still hurting from the long slash wound, not to mention her own internal accusing voice.
“What do you mean, a quest for stardom?” he went on.
“You’d better come to my house. It’s easier to see than talk about.
We’ve got an informal task force assembled. It’s a fine line right now between putting out a wide-enough net for her, and one not so huge it’ll spook her to run farther, faster.”
“Where is your house?”
“What? You didn’t check that out the moment you realized I lived and worked in Vegas?”
“I’m not a stalker, just a damn surprised father despite myself.”
She didn’t comment, only gave him the street address and directions from his apartment as efficiently as some receptionist.
She shut her eyes momentarily after hanging up the phone.
Morrie Alch was leaning on her breakfast bar, watching her like a loyal Scottish terrier. “That Daddy Dearest?”
“Yup. Private cop at the Oasis. Heard some buzz on the police radio and thought of us.”
“He’s coming here? That’ll be interesting.”
“Yeah. Let me put a final scare into this Buchanan creep and get his every contact method before I kick him out.”
He eyed Dirty Larry slouched on the living-room sofa. “Mr. Undercover Guy fetched a snitch list from his car and is now calling informants who hang out at the bus station. Good idea.”
“His idea. He didn’t get any info from the neighbors?” she asked.
“Nada. He know about Nadir?”
She shook her head.
“You want me to clue him in?”
“Thanks, but it’s my responsibility.”
“You must be beat by now,” Alch said.
“Beat up, more like it. By myself. How could I have missed that Mariah was being way too sweet and helpful to her down-for-the-count mama, all the while scheming to make her break for fame and fortune? I should never have let her compete in that goofy reality TV show. Still, she’d showed some initiative in picking a goal and going for it. I thought that would be the end of it. Where do they get these ideas?”
“It’s in the air nowadays. Next thing my married daughter will be racing off to that runway supermodel hunt show, although she doesn’t make the age, height, and weight requirement.”
Molina managed a weak smile. “I can handle Rafi. He’s actually showing paternal inclinations. More than I’d like, especially now.”
“You gave him a raw deal.” Alch’s dark, dog-loyal eyes had gone paternally stern. “Not telling the guy, just running off. Kinda like Mariah here.”
“Shut up, Morrie. I’ m not in the mood.”
“I’m just saying, Lieutenant.” He ambled off to give her room and time to stew in her own juices.
She hustled Buchanan to the door, where she pumped all his phone numbers into her cell before shoving him out, while Larry ambled down the hall for another check of Mariah’s room.
He returned to join Alch sitting on the couch. The place looked cramped with three adults around, and empty beyond belief with Mariah not about to race down the hall screaming for a missing hair scrunchie or a fresh uniform blouse.
Carmen found her deadliest enemy, emotion on the job, almost strangling her.
She was a cop. A homicide lieutenant, for God’s sake! She had to tackle this like any other case or she’d be no good to anyone, most of all Mariah.
She checked her watch: 11:30 P.M. Three hours since she’d discovered Mariah was gone, three hours until Matt Devine was off work and probably on the phone with his fiancée. She’d bet Temple Barr would tell him what she was doing.
Great! Another person to add to the jury of her peers so ready to condemn her.
She checked her watch again. Under the pain of stitches pulled by her tensed stomach muscles and severe stomach acid, she was dreading Rafi coming here, into her life with both feet and a right to be angry.
The knock on her front door made her start. One knock. The minimum.
“I’ll get it.” Alch was nearest the door and opened it while Rafi still had his back turned to the house, checking out the neighborhood, the parked cars.
He spun around like a wary prizefighter to take in Alch, Larry Podesta, even the two cats weaving around all the alien legs, sniffing. With his swarthy Lebanese-American looks and wearing the plain dark suit of a hotel security supervisor he looked like a sinister FBI man. He spotted her last.