Chapter One I got on my knees, held my breath, and extended my fingers.
It was sleek and firm, but it sprang slightly at my touch. I kept my eyes closed and continued my exploration.
Suddenly, the surface gave way. My fingers sank through, diving into a wet, gooey pit.
"Ugh," I groaned, and squeezed my eyes more tightly shut as I extracted my hand.
"Gnarly nuns and timid terriers, Reyn. What are you doing?"
I really didn't want to look at what was hanging off my fingers, and I really didn't need to open my eyes to see who was standing over me. Instead, I eased to my feet, trusted that my guest would stay out of the way, and did the blind-man's grope to the sink. I cranked the handle up and slid my hand under the stream of water.
"Ow, damn!" My eyes flew open and took in the kaleidoscope of neon that was my best friend, Trudy, as I danced around the kitchen shaking my seared hand in the air. I'd forgotten that, just minutes before, I'd cranked the water as hot as it could go, which felt like somewhere around eighteen million degrees. That's what I got for being forgetful.
"I hate to repeat myself," Trudy said as she handed me a dish towel, "but I will anyway. What the hell are you doing, Reyn?"
"I'm cleaning out my refrigerator."
"Dun, dun-dun-dun," Trudy sang out a dirge. "Dun, dun-dun-dun."
"Very funny."
"From the looks of what was hanging off your fingers a second ago, it's not too funny. What was that, anyway?"
I peeked into the half-open hydrator. "Rotten eggplant. If I left it a little longer, maybe it could ooze out of there on its own." I looked a little more closely at the gray-green fuzz near the semblance of a stem.
"I'm not going to ask why you are cleaning your refrigerator. Obviously, it's needed to be cleaned almost since you bought it. However, I will ask, why are you cleaning it now?"
"It's one of my if-I-live-through-this resolutions to myself."
"Wouldn't those be made after you survived the refrigerator cleaning?"
I glared. "I made three resolutions to myself while that maniac was trying to erase me."
"That was a long time ago, Reyn. You're just now getting around to it?" Trudy pointed out with irritating accuracy. Why couldn't I have a best friend who thought I was brave and brilliant, who never pointed out my faults and always praised my virtues? Because I'd never buy that load of crap, that's why. Trudy was shaking her head. "What about the other two resolutions?"
"Well," I began as I replaced the dish towel on its peg, "one of them I can't do yet -- or, hopefully, ever."
"Why not?" Trude cocked her hip and put a fist on it. Her rayon minidress looked like something straight out of That '70s Show (or, of course, the actual '70s) with its psychedelic wiggly bull's-eye business and the clash of electric green, traffic-cone orange, and spastic yellow. Its hem hit three inches below the crotch of her Victoria's Secret undies (I didn't have to look, she just didn't own anything else). People would be thrown into peals of laughter had I worn anything like this. The same people were paralyzed by awestruck ogling when Trudy wore it. Her legs were that good. Even better now, after a summer out in the sun. The thing is, summer in San Antonio lasts until November, so she'd still be tan for Christmas. Now, me, I never tan. I just get freckles.
"I can't do it because the resolution is that I will hide all the knives and other sharp, potentially homicidal objects in my house the next time I go poking around in a murdered friend's life."
Trudy rolled her eyes. "You're right. What are the odds of that ever happening again? I mean, how many people have friends who are murdered -- and then, of course, even if that did happen again, by some bizarre twist of fate, you've learned your lesson on not messing around with murder investigations because you nearly got killed. Right?"
Uh-oh. I really wasn't sorry for what I'd done about Ricardo Montoya's murder, even though my best friend and the man who occupied my dreams at night thought I was sorry. But I wasn't letting on to them about my lack of remorse. "Right. Sure. I'll never conduct my own murder investigation again. No sirree. So the odds are way too low, even to consider resolution number two," I agreed, moving past the eggplant and on to the jars along the refrigerator door.
"And the third if-I-live-through-this resolution?" Trudy asked, not effectively distracted by the pungent odor of apricot jelly that had fermented nearly to wine. I closed the jar and pitched it into the garbage can I had dragged into the middle of the kitchen. Its twenty-gallon capacity was already half full.
"It's a little vague."
"Vague?"
"I was under a lot of stress at the time, remember? I was being pursued by a duct-tape-wielding killer with an affinity for sharp objects."
"You made this resolution before or after you were victim of the sharp object?"
"Before. But I already had been attacked by the duct tape. It tore the first six layers of skin off my face."
"Uh-huh, the excuse you used to keep Scythe at arm's length for a month." She let that hang in the air for a minute. I wasn't going to bite. Talking about the hunky police detective gave me a headache. And hot flashes. I was too young to be having those. He was a helluva good kisser, that's all I knew, even after months of pussyfooting around our sexual attraction and "the deal." Frankly, it was enough hassle to make a woman go gay. But Trudy didn't need to know even that much. Especially since this "deal" was really something she and Scythe had come up with, and I was more than a little hazy on the details.
She raised her eyebrows, reached for a container of tofu, and checked the expiration date. "And the resolution?" she insisted.
I lowered my head and muttered, "To get organized."
Trudy's giggle always starts like the peep of a newborn chick and gets louder and louder, until it reminds me of a Ritalin-deprived three-year-old playing the violin. I saw tears in the corners of her eyes. It really pissed me off.
"What prompted you to make this particular resolution?"
"Besides imminent death?"
"Besides that."
"I couldn't find my extra set of truck keys for a getaway."
"Okay." Trudy rubbed her hands together. "So, you found them and got all your keys set up in an organized manner."
"Umm." I considered reapproaching the eggplant and toed the hydrator open further.
"You didn't find your extra set of truck keys, did you?" The self-righteous way she said it made me think the nuns at Trudy's grammar school had rubbed off on her a little too much.
"Not yet."
Ever optimistic, Trudy smiled, a little too brightly. "Instead, then, you tackled the job from a different direction. Taking on your closets, maybe."
"You think I should start there?"
"You haven't started at all?" Her shoulders slumped in disappointment. The too-bright went out of her smile. Her neon was suddenly the only thing lighting up the room.
"I wanted to do the refrigerator first, considering it involved perishables." Bravely, I swiped up the oozing eggplant and slam-dunked it into the plastic pail.
"It involved perishables, months and months later." Trude threw her hands into the air and sashayed to the kitchen door. Shaking her head in disgust, she let herself out and slammed the door. My Labrador retriever trio, mother and two daughters, looked at me in question. They'd been observing the scene quietly since Trude walked in. I think they were on their best behavior in hopes of me slipping them a molding slice of Brie or something worse. You know dogs. Remember where they like to sniff.
"I'm definitely looking for an ass-kissing friend," I told Beaujolais, Chardonnay, and Cabernet. "Starting tomorrow."
I returned to my grim work in the refrigerator, and, aside from taking the time to eat two pieces of turtle cheesecake before they went bad, I kept at it for a couple of hours, until I was interrupted by the ringing of the telephone. Since I'm so supremely organized, I ran around, knocking into things, listening for the direction of the ring. I found the phone between the cushions of the couch in the den (duh, the first place everyone looks!), and also found the truck keys, but not before the call went to the answering machine. I hated the sound of my own voice, so I hummed through my greeting, then listened to the reedy-voiced caller: "Reyn, this is Lexa...Alexandra Barrister. I am so sorry...so sorry to bother you so late, and at home, too. I promise, I tried the salon. No answer."
For the first time, I glanced at the clock. It was eleven-nineteen. But I'm a night person, so I was just coming alive, which is why I kept listening.
"If you could call me back...at any hour, really. I have an emergency. It involves Mother. I mean, Wilma."
I picked up before I could really register how rattled Lexa -- one of the most eccentric clients to cross my threshold -- must be to call her mother "Mother."
"Hello?"
"Reyn? Oh, Reyn! I was beginning to think I was going to have to manage it alone."
"What's it? What's the emergency?" Managing made me think of large sums of money or large objects that needed to be moved, like cows and big-ass great-aunts. With my luck, it involved the latter.
"It's Mother. Wilma. It's her hair." The silence stretched out for nearly a minute.
Wilma Barrister was one scary woman, and I didn't like the way this conversation was going. Somewhere between fifty and sixty, Wilma could be described as "handsome" -- you know, one of those horse-faced, hard-eyed ladies who rose above the "plain" moniker by the grace of expensive cosmetics, designer clothing, and a commanding presence. Her thick silver hair was her best feature, its simple turned-under, chin-length style emulated by the high-society senior set. She was on this month's cover of San Antonio Women, along with an article detailing her extensive philanthropic work. My only personal encounter with the charity maven had been a...