Mary half expected to see a silenced pistol poke out and drill one right through her forehead.
But instead, Mary was surprised to see a woman’s face looking at her.
It was the wife of the mayor.
“I need your help,” she said.
40
Forty
Veronica Baxter was a beautiful woman. It being Los Angeles, Mary was fairly accustomed to seeing gorgeous men and women roaming the streets looking like someone had spilled several truckloads of department store mannequins all over the place.
But the mayor’s wife was something else.
She was definitely beautiful, but in addition to the sheer perfection of the woman’s face, there was a striking quality Mary couldn’t quite put her finger on.
Veronica Baxter had coal-black hair, black, smoky eyes, and perfect lips. The features were sharp, almost hatchet-like, and it was the severity, that type of cutting beauty, which added an element of danger to Veronica Baxter.
Mary was intrigued.
“What’s a nice girl like you doing in a limo like this?” Mary said. She raised her chin at the row of whiskey decanters and cognac snifters arrayed on the side of the interior space.
“Believe me, if I were a nice girl, and I’m not, I wouldn’t last two minutes around here,” she said with a sad, wistful smile.
“Yeah, you’ve lasted, what, four years?” Mary said, trying to remember exactly how long Baxter had been in office. She wanted to ask the mayor’s wife to pour her a stiff drink, but couldn’t figure out a tactful way to put it.
“Can you pour me a drink?” Mary said. “I just got out of jail.”
Fuck tactful.
The mayor’s wife sloshed some scotch into a thick glass and handed it to Mary.
“Six years in office, seventeen years in marriage,” Veronica Baxter said. Mary couldn’t tell which one disappointed Veronica more. “All without any help from Mary Cooper,” Mary said. “So what changed?” She took a sip of the liquor. Its warmth burned and soothed simultaneously.
Veronica Baxter sighed and drummed her beautifully manicured nails on the leather armrest between them.
“I hate to even say it because it’ll sound like such a cliché,” she finally said.
“That’s okay, I love clichés,” Mary said. “If it weren’t for clichés, what would everyone say at funerals or right after sex?”
The mayor’s wife took a deep breath. “Nothing changed. The affair just happened.”
“And who did Thomas sleep with?” Mary said.
Veronica Baxter shook her head of lovely hair.
“Oh, Thomas didn’t have the affair,” she said. “I did.”
41
Forty-one
“I’m not going to bore you with the details,” Veronica Baxter told Mary.
“First of all, I’m sure the details are from boring,” Mary said. “Second, I need a refill. And third, I have to ask: was it your landscaper?”
The mayor’s wife looked like she’d been slapped.
“How did you know?“ she said. She topped off Mary’s glass, her hands shaking a bit as they performed the task.
“I’m a detective, remember?” Mary said. “Besides, those guys love to whack more than just weeds, if you know what I’m saying.”
Veronica Baxter clasped her hands together in her lap, as if she was about to pray.
“It didn’t actually come together for me until now,” Mary said. “Now that I see your face, I immediately recognize Nina in you. And not Elyse Ramirez, or whatever her name was.” Mary sipped her scotch. “Did you hire her to pose as Nina’s mother?”
Veronica Baxter nodded.
“When she was taken, I didn’t know what to do. I went to Derek — he’s the head of my husband’s security detail — but I didn’t like his solutions,” the mayor’s wife said. “I just wanted to pay them and get Nina back.”
“Pay the blackmailers,” Mary said, putting two and two together.
Again, Veronica Baxter nodded.
“So while Derek Jarvis was going to take care of it in his own way, you decided to hire your own private investigator and try to solve the problem yourself,” Mary said.
“Yes, I don’t like or trust Jarvis. I regret going to him in the first place.”
“I’m guessing a lot of people once formerly alive and now dead wish you hadn’t gone to him either.”
Veronica Baxter’s face went three shades of white.
“You don’t know?” Mary said.
“I knew the woman I hired to hire you was murdered, but I didn’t know it was Derek,” she said. “I figured it might have been the kidnappers.”
“I don’t know for sure, either,” Mary said. “But I have some strong suspicions. And another question.”
Baxter’s shoulders sagged, and Mary thought the woman suddenly looked exhausted.
“Since I am a detective, I can’t help but do the math on this situation. Nina is seventeen, and you’ve been married for how long?”
“Seventeen years,” Baxter said. “Initially, mine and Tom’s relationship was. . fluid.”
“I think fluid is what caused this problem in the first place,” Mary said. Okay, she hadn’t become that sensitive with clients.
“I made a mistake very early in our marriage,” the mayor’s wife said. “It’s one I obviously regret. And now have to set right.”
The limo pulled to a stop.
Mary glanced out the window and saw her car.
The driver got out and popped the trunk.
“I need to hire you to do something for me,” the mayor’s wife said. “I will triple your normal fee.”
Alarm bells went off in Mary’s head. No one paid triple for something that wasn’t totally fucked up and dangerous.
“I need you to deliver a suitcase containing quite a bit of cash. It is for the safe return of my daughter.”
Mary didn’t like it one bit.
Baxter handed Mary the suitcase, which had been next to her on the floor of the limo, and a piece of paper, which she pulled from her pocket.
“This is where they want the money delivered,” she said. “Be careful.”
The side door opened, and the driver stood, letting Mary know it was time to go.
Mary got out.
Baxter looked like she wanted to say something else, some type of “good luck” comment, but nothing came out. Instead, she just looked at Mary.
Mary shut the door.
The driver got back in the limo and took off.
Mary looked at the suitcase, and then at her car, then at the piece of paper in her hand. The address was right on the border with Mexico.
Hmmm, she thought. Driving toward Mexico with a suitcase full of cash.
Sounded like a party.
42
Forty-two
It took her nearly three hours to get to Imperial Beach, a little town south of San Diego, a stone’s throw from the border and Tijuana, Mexico.
Imperial Beach was considered a beach and surfing town, but parts of it were downright dangerous and scary.
Mary followed her navigation to the drop location — a parking lot near a military range.
Maybe they’re going to send a few missiles my way after they get the money, Mary thought.
Or a drone strike.
She parked the car and waited.
There was no question she was being watched. The sensation picked at her, like hints of impending doom. She had no backup. Jake was usually her ace-in-the-hole, but with him not answering her phone calls, she now thought of him as an ass-in-the-hole.