“Carmen.” Said with a curt nod. Everyone’s eyes snapped to him. Most had never heard anyone call her Carmen.
Now came the ugliest moment. All hers. She turned to the two men in the room.
“This is Mariah’s father, Rafi Nadir. He works security at the Oasis Hotel. Alch, take him to Mariah’s room and cover the bases.”
Dirty Larry had stood, a junkyard dog uneasy about the unexpected stray on his watch.
Rafi sensed the possessiveness immediately. “I know him”—he nodded at Alch—“from the reality TV house.” Then he eyed Dirty Larry. “And this is?”
Molina would not have believed she’d ever see two guys getting territorial over her, or, rather, over her house and daughter. She segued into the needed introductions.
“Dirty Larry’s usually undercover. That’s the name he goes by.”
“Wait. You were at the reality TV show finals too,” Nadir said. “With Molina” was left unspoken.
Larry nodded. “I saw you there too. You weren’t a guest or family member. What for?”
“Freelance security.”
“You been a cop?”
“Yeah. L.A.”
Larry’s head snapped back, impressed. L.A. cops took no guff, though they had a rep for cutting too many corners.
“Cool,” he said. “No wonder Mariah’s got gumption, however misplaced. Cop kid, one hundred percent.” He turned cool gray eyes on Molina and squinted like Clint Eastwood.
Alch and Nadir headed for the bedroom, leaving the two of them alone with the cats.
“You kept this guy tightly under wraps, Carmen,” Larry said softly.
“I keep everyone tightly under wraps.”
“Including yourself.” He grinned. “Don’t worry. You got a good team going here. We’ll find Mariah. And then you get to decide how long you want to ground her.”
“I’d just be happy to have a kid to keep home, Larry.”
“I see runaways all the time when I’m undercover. They’re nothing like Mariah. She’s a runaway to, not from. Her goal may sound dopey to adults but it all makes sense to her. I bet it’s sinking in now, what’s she’s done. How silly and scary it is. She may even come running back home, or call home.
“I don’t think so.” Molina shook her head. “She’s as stubborn as her mother, and that’s a very big, bad overdose.”
“You won’t be comforted, will you?”
“Not until we have her back.”
Dirty Larry produced a crumpled pack of cigarettes and lifted his eyebrows. She nodded. The others were in Mariah’s bedroom.
“I didn’t know you smoked,” she commented.
“Only undercover. It hides any nervousness.”
“You’re nervous here and now?”
“Yeah. This isn’t my scene. Usually the pressure is only on me, all on me. Here, I can’t do much but ask questions and wait.”
“Me too,” Molina snapped impatiently.
Footsteps, two sets, sped down the hallway, sounding like elephants in her small house.
Rafi first, looking sick, Alch second, looking sicker.
Rafi held out something glittery and stiff. It reminded Molina of the reality TV show that sought supermodels, Runway, which Alch had just joked about to ease her tension.
“I found this under all the clutter, on the floor near the computer table and the window,” Rafi said, hoarse and angry. “Didn’t the ‘unofficial task force’ do a halfway decent search, for Christ’s sake?”
She beat Larry to a closer inspection of the stiff, fourteen-inch-long item Rafi clutched like a weapon. She noticed he wore a pair of Alch’s latex gloves. Damn, she couldn’t fault him on anything.
What he held was . . . a Barbie doll, all done up in an evening dress and . . . all undone, the long plastic hair snarled, red nail polish slashed across the plastic mouth and eyes and throat, an arm and leg dislocated.
“The Barbie Doll Stalker,” Larry said like a curse under his breath. “That girl who auditioned for the reality TV show at the local mall, killed and left in the parking lot. You’ve never solved that case.”
“We never found the creep,” Molina said in a dead calm voice. “The case is still open. We thought the mutilated dolls looked like a sick, unrelated joke. When did this get here, goddammit! Yes, we searched the room as soon as we knew Mariah was missing, Morrie and I. We wouldn’t have missed this.”
The silence on Rafi’s part implied they obviously had.
“No,” Alch said, “it’s worse than the notion we missed something.”
He eyed her hard, unblinking, so she’d take every word seriously.
“I went over everything near the window, first thing, Lieutenant. That doll wasn’t there a few hours ago, but it sure is now. Somebody’s shadowing our moves. Unless there’s an accomplice, at least it means that Mariah isn’t being stalked yet.”
“Naw.” Larry was talking now. “It means that somebody knows the kid’s gone, and is daring us to follow and find her. The creep is probably as much in the dark as we are. I don’t get why he’d want to tip us off with a voodoo doll.”
Molina took such a deep breath that her hand went to her side as if to hold her stitches shut. To everyone but Alch, it just looked like a frustrated gesture.
“I know why,” she said. “I’ve had a stalker. There’ve been other tokens left in this house while we were gone, and the last invasion centered on Mariah’s room. I thought it all looked intended to shake me up, but maybe it was directed at Mariah more than I realized.”
She eyed the three men in the living room.
“Anybody here want to ’fess up?” She was only one-quarter kidding.
“You suspected me of such a stupid, pathetic M.O.?” Rafi asked.
She said nothing.
Larry pulled out another cigarette and rolled it through his fingers. Nervous? But saying nothing.
“You’re still the prime target,” Alch said decisively. “Mariah being gone and now threatened is just another way to get at you.”
Temple had lingered in her parked car for a few minutes after leaving Molina’s house, feeling a bit confused and excited and amazed. “Visiting relatives” wasn’t an excuse Matt would swallow, with no relatives in town. She’d have to tell him the truth. Molina was on a mad mama roll to find her errant daughter, and Temple was a critical player.
It both revved and scared Temple that she might be key in finding Molina’s missing daughter. The idea of Mariah out on the road, being preyed on by smooth dudes, was deeply upsetting.
She was just a kid! An ambitious kid, but hadn’t Temple been writing movie companies with suggestions of books she could star in since the age of eight? True, she’d gotten over that by thirteen, which Mariah was, but in Temple’s day there weren’t the serious performance opportunities youngsters of today had.
And, face it, Temple had an instant “in” to this online world of would-be young performers.
Zoe Chloe Ozone, her off-the-cuff creation, was an Internet hottie! Was Temple a woman behind her time, or what? She pictured a cable TV show, an interview show—take that, Oprah and Ellen! A sudden guest star career. She envisioned herself as . . . Mariah, swinging out there on a scheme and a prayer.
Grow up, Barr, she told herself.
First she had to help Molina find and recover her daughter.
Then she had to calculate her own star power. Apparently Zoe Chloe Ozone was a wholly Temple-owned entertainment entity that would not die. Oh, mama!
Car Chase
Sometimes choosing the right ride is the most crucial decision the private operative will make.
When there is a sudden abandonment of Chez Molina this evening by two parties driving two vehicles, I am confronted by a basic choice: staying at the scene with an unsupervised Rafi Nadir and Dirty Larry, who bear watching, in my humble opinion, or heading out with one of the dear departing; my lovely roomie or the unlovely jerk we both know and loathe.