Deadline, p.14
Deadline, page 14
She recited Chris’s number from memory. “Is that the same number you have?” Toots asked her daughter.
“Yes,” Abby replied.
“Then let’s allow Goebel to do his stuff, okay?”
Abby nodded. “Sure, Mom, but don’t try to act like you’re telling me everything because I know you too well. I’ll leave it alone for now, but later, you and I are going to have a talk, okay?” she admonished.
Toots wanted to spill the beans right there on the spot. She was not good at this ... lying-to-her-daughter garbage. She could hide behind e-mails and FedEx letters until the cows came home, but lying face-to-face was a different matter entirely.
She would have to reveal that she was the face and fortune behind The Informer, eventually. Toots hoped when Abby knew the truth, enough time would have passed that her daughter would forgive her the lies she’d told. But that was for another time. She had to focus on doing whatever she could to help locate Chris before the press, especially one silicone-enhanced, lip-glossed Chloe Brown, destroyed him.
Wanting to say more but knowing it wasn’t the time, Toots nodded in agreement. “When Chris is home safe and sound, we’ll talk.”
“You promise?” Abby asked, knowing Toots never broke a promise.
“I promise. Now let’s focus on finding Chris. The sooner we locate him, the sooner we can have that talk.” Again, Toots had the sudden urge to spill her guts right then and there, but didn’t. Soon, she thought, soon. She’d been the puppeteer longer than she’d originally planned. It really was time to step out from behind the curtain.
While all this was going on, Goebel had been busy punching in info on his laptop and talking on his cell phone. He placed his hand over the speaker. “It won’t take long to get the results. Told my buddy this was a life-or-death matter.”
“Maybe you could come to work for me,” Abby joked.
Goebel clicked off the phone and hit a few keys on his laptop before answering. “I’m too old to start a new career, but thanks. You ever need a background check or anything like that, you call me, okay?”
“Thanks, we have a guru at the paper who takes care of that type of thing, but if he’s unable to make a connection in the future, I may take you up on that offer.” Then, Abby reconsidered his offer. “Actually, there is something you could do for me, and I’ll pay you for this myself. I’ve been secretly trying to find out who the mysterious name is behind The Informer. I’ve used every resource I have and I always come up empty. And I’d like to find that SOB who left me holding the bag, my former boss at the paper. Maybe after we locate Chris, you could help me locate the person who signs my paycheck.”
Toots’s heart rate shot up so fast, she thought she would faint. She grabbed the glass in front of her, drank the last of the water, then chomped on an ice cube. Her hands were shaking so badly, she put them under her legs so neither Abby nor Goebel would see them. She hoped Abby wouldn’t notice the change. Toots knew there would be no getting around telling Abby now. Goebel was good, and Abby knew that. If he failed to locate the “mysterious” new owner, and the former owner, Rodwell Archibald Godfrey, known as Rag to his former employees, her daughter would become even more suspicious. Toots knew full well her days were numbered. Soon, she would have to tell Abby her big secret and hope for the best.
Goebel cast a quick glance at Toots. He raised his eyebrows when she shot him a killer look. “Uh, sure. Just let me know when you’re ready.”
Toots would discuss the problem with Goebel later.
“I will,” Abby said, before turning to stare at Toots. “Mother, is there something wrong? Why do I have the sneaking feeling you know something I don’t? Did you speak to Chris? Is he married? Did he run off with that stupid actress? Because if he did, you can tell me. I don’t really give a good rat’s ass what he does anymore. For that matter, he can stay wherever the hell he’s been hiding for the past four days. Idonotcare!”
Toots smiled. Abby had it bad—real bad. “No I truly didn’t speak with Chris.” At least that was the truth.
“Well, don’t tell me if you do. I hate him, okay?” Abby pushed her chair away from the table and stomped out to the deck. Chester and Coco shot out the door behind her. Toots was glad, as she wanted a few minutes alone with Goebel.
“I know what you’re going to say, and you don’t even have to say it, okay? Let’s just say if I were to search”—he made air quotes with his large hands—“it might take me a while to locate such a huge corporation. All that corporate red tape.”
Toots breathed a sigh of relief. A temporary sigh of relief, but for now, she’d take it.
“Of course. I understand,” Toots agreed. Soon very soon, she’d come clean.
Abby stepped back inside, ending any further conversation. Chester and Coco panted at her heels and ran to the refrigerator.
“Okay, I know I promised you both a treat. Give me a sec, all right?” Opening the refrigerator, Abby quickly located Coco’s supply of turkey breasts and pinched off small pieces for the couple and dropped them in their doggie dishes. Both dogs hightailed across the room to their bowls. “You two are so spoiled.”
Toots waited patiently while Abby took care of the animals’ needs. She needed to address the comments Abby had made about Chris.
After Abby rinsed her greasy hands, she sat down across from Toots. “Okay, go ahead, read me the riot act. I know that look on your face.”
Goebel chose that moment to speak up. “I think I’m going to take a stroll. I don’t get to see moonlight and beaches too often in my neck of the woods. You ladies mind?”
Both shook their heads.
“By all means,” Toots said. “Just make sure you take your shoes off. Get the feel of the sand and all.”
“Absolutely.” Goebel winked at Toots.
She knew he was simply giving her and Abby a bit of privacy. He really was a gentleman. She would put in a few good words for him with Sophie. Not that he needed them, but it certainly couldn’t hurt.
As soon as he escaped through the sliding doors, Toots spoke. “Abby, I know you didn’t mean all those things you said about Chris. I know you’re angry at him, and that’s understandable. We both know Chris wouldn’t purposely cause either of us to worry. And I know he’s not the kind of man that would ... shack up with one of those silly starlets he represents. He is a man of integrity, just like his father. I know you have strong feelings for him, Abby. If you didn’t, you wouldn’t have said those things.” Toots paused for a few seconds, trying desperately to find the right words to say even though she wasn’t one hundred percent clear on what it was she hoped to convey to her daughter.
“Why are you telling me this, Mom? What’s your point?” Abby asked, her voice laced with impatience.
“Abby Simpson, I cannot believe you’re talking to me this way! I swear you have it bad. That’s what I wanted to talk to you about.” It is, Toots thought.
“I’m sorry, I don’t know what came over me. I’m tired, and yes, you’re right. I am worried about Chris.”
Toots leaned across the table and took Abby’s hand in hers. “It’s normal to worry about the man you love.”
Abby stared at Toots, her face turning ten shades of red. “I’m worried about ... his safety.” She paused as though she were considering what she’d just said.
“Yes, that’s it really. I just hope he isn’t hurt. That’s all. Yes, I care about Chris, but I don’t think I am madly in love with him.”
Toots chuckled. “Of course you are. I see the way you look at him when you think no one is noticing. You have a glow about you, a special look. That’s the look of love. I’m quite familiar with it.”
Abby laughed. “Yes, I suppose you are. But Mom, please let’s not talk about Chris and me, you know, as a couple. I’m simply concerned for his safety. Let’s leave it at that.”
Toots knew when to shut up. And it just happened to be one of those times. Abby was right. Chris’s safety was their main concern.
Chapter 16
The three women were quiet as they traveled back to the beach house. Sophie hadn’t told Ida or Mavis about her vision, but they suspected something had occurred. As they had finished laying out Mr. Frank, Mavis had asked Sophie twice what had happened at the reading for Mrs. Leigh. Sophie told her she didn’t want to talk about it at the moment, but would; she just needed a bit of time. They’d accepted her decision without question.
“Sophie, let’s listen to the radio. There may be news of Chris,” Mavis said in her sugary-sweet voice, which was really starting to grate on Sophie’s nerves.
Sophie didn’t want anything to taint her vision, no verbal or visual influences. Any media was out of the question. So much for allowing her time to muse over tonight’s events. “I guess I can tell you now since waiting won’t change the outcome, or at least I don’t think so.”
“Stop being so damn dramatic, Sophia.” Ida used her given name, something she only did when she was in one of her I-am-queen moods.
“Kiss my butt, Ida. I’m not the drama queen here.” Sophie made the turnoff to the beach house. Maybe she should wait until they were inside. That way, she would only have to tell her story once. Yes, that was what she would do. Toots could advise her, and Goebel, she couldn’t forget him. Damn, she was falling for that big teddy bear of a man and wasn’t sure if she liked the idea or not. Men were trouble. She knew that from her experience with Walter. She also knew not all men were drunkards and wife beaters. She smiled. Goebel was truly one of a kind.
Mavis reached for the radio button. Before she could push it in, Sophie placed her hand on top of Mavis’s. “I don’t want to listen to the news now. What I have to tell you could be influenced by a news report, and I don’t want to be sidetracked. Let’s wait until we’re at the beach house. I promise I will tell you what happened tonight. I just want to wait so I do not have to tell the story twice.”
“Oh, of course. I’m sorry! I just thought there might be some news,” Mavis singsonged again.
“I hope whatever it is you have to say is worth hearing. Something tells me you’re up to no good,” Ida sniped.
“Don’t start, Ida, okay?” Sophie turned into the driveway and saw that Toot’s red T-Bird was there. Goebel was back from his investigation. Her heart warmed just thinking about him.
Shifting into PARK, Sophie removed the keys, and hit the unlock button so Ida and Mavis could exit the car. “I’m not saying another word to you until we’re inside and I’ve had at least two cigarettes and a cup of coffee.” Sophie hefted her small frame out of the large Escalade, then clicked the LOCK button as soon as Mavis and Ida had closed their doors.
The women hurried inside, where they found Toots and Abby sitting at the table. Sophie was the first to comment. “Where’s Goebel? I thought he was here. Your hot wheels are parked out in the drive.” She always referred to Toots’s small sports car as a Hot Wheels toy.
“He went for a walk, said he wanted to see the moonlight and feel the sand. He hasn’t been gone that long,” Toots said. “Abby made a fresh pot of coffee. Who’s up for some late-night caffeine?”
“Thank you, Toots, but I think I will just have a glass of mineral water. All that caffeine keeps me awake at night.” As Mavis walked over to place a kiss on Abby’s cheek, she saw Coco and Chester huddled in the corner. She located her water in the refrigerator, then sat in the chair beside Toots.
Ida rinsed her coffee cup, filled it with juice, then joined them. “Sophie is bursting at the seams with news, or so she says. She experienced something tonight but wouldn’t tell me or Mavis, insisting we should wait so she would only have to tell her story once. I for one want to know what’s so important.”
Sophie listened to Ida run her mouth. She filled her cup with the hot brown liquid, grabbed a package of Marlboros, and headed for the deck. “I’m going to puff. Want to join me, Toots?”
“Not now. Abby hates the smell. You go ahead; we’ll wait.”
Sophie stepped outside, lit up, took a few drags off her smoke, then popped inside a minute later. “Okay, that’ll hold me for a while.”
“Soph, I wish you and Mom would stop smoking. It’s gross, and it stinks.” Abby waved her hand in front of her face.
“I will, Abby. Someday.” Sophie slid into the chair across from Toots. “But not today. Soon, though, I promise.”
“I’m dying to know what happened with Mrs. Leigh’s reading. Please, don’t keep us in suspense any longer,” Toots said.
Sophie nodded, and took a drink of coffee. “Why don’t I wait until Goebel returns? I’m sure he’ll want to hear this, too?”
As if on cue, the glass doors opened. With his shoes in one hand and keys dangling in the other, Goebel entered the kitchen. All eyes focused on him. “You gals okay?” Concern etched across his rugged face.
Sophie perked up, her eyes shining with delight. “Yes and no. We need to talk; you arrived just in time. I was telling the girls I didn’t want to repeat this story if I didn’t have to. You want coffee?” Sophie jumped out of her chair before Goebel could say yes or no.
He laughed. “You’re darn right I do.”
She brought the pot to the table, along with a cup. “Sit,” Sophie ordered. Goebel did as she commanded.
“Now I know why I like this man,” she teased. “He follows orders well.”
Ida cleared her throat and rolled her eyes. “Wonderful, Sophia. Just wonderful! Let’s stop flirting and get on with it. I want to go upstairs. I’m tired. It’s been a long day.”
“Okay. Ida’s right. It has been a long day, and she and Mavis had their hands full this evening.” Sophie directed her gaze at Ida. A huge grin spread across her face at the memory of the man at the funeral home. Not that he was dead, but what the girls had to deal with above and beyond the usual. She wasn’t going to say anything to Toots or Abby, at least not yet. Chris was top priority.
Mavis’s face turned white, Ida’s matched her bright pink hair. “Not now, Sophie,” Ida ordered. “Just get on with it.”
“I agree. Spit it out. We need to stop screwing around. This is important,” Toots said, sobering them all up to their current reality. “Tell us what happened.”
“I’ve never experienced anything like this before.” Sophie paused. “It scared me. I had to wait a while before I could do the reading. The woman was a bitch. Well, sort of, just a tad on the weird side. She didn’t introduce herself, hadn’t a clue what manners are.” Sophie looked at Ida. “I know what you’re going to say.
“As I was about to start placing the tarot cards, I became so dizzy I was sure I would pass out. Obviously, I didn’t, but I kid you not ... I had a vision. I saw a brilliant white light, then an incredibly bright shade of red. It blew me away because this woman was waiting for me to start turning the cards, and I was in the midst of this ... this experience. I’m not sure how long it lasted, and at first I couldn’t figure out what the images were. Frankly, for a minute or two, I thought I was about to lose it, but I didn’t. I ran out to the car without much of an explanation. Then I sat there a good long time until I figured out what I had been seeing.”
“And?” Ida hissed.
“I’m sure what I saw was a red car covered with a mountain of snow.”
Chapter 17
“That fits with the information I just received. One of the reasons I turned around and came back. I had a colleague run a check on Chris’s phone records. He was able to locate the last phone call made from that number. The last possible tower that could have recorded a ping was a tower five hours away from here. If the information I have is correct, and I have no reason to believe it isn’t, Chris is somewhere just southeast of Lake Tahoe,” Goebel informed the others. “Do any of you know if he has a GPS tracking device on his cell phone?”
“I’m sure he does. I just can’t believe he’s in Lake Tahoe. What would he be doing in that area?” Abby asked, then remembered Chris’s friend Steve, who was staying at Chris’s condo. “Chris has a friend staying in his condo, and I’m sure he knows where Chris is.” Abby took her cell phone out of her pocket. “I’m going to call Chris’s house. Maybe Steve will answer and tell me where the heck Chris took off to, though he swore he didn’t know when I asked him. I’m not sure I believe him now.”
Quickly, she punched in his home phone number, and paced back and forth. Several rings later, Abby was greeted by Chris’s overly cheerful voice. “Hey, I’m not here. Sorry, peeps. Call my cell.” His answering machine. She clicked the END button on her phone.
“Nothing. I don’t even know if Steve’s still there. Maybe I need to take another drive over to Chris’s condo and question that guy again. I can’t believe Chris could leave, let someone stay in his condo, and not tell them where he was going. What do you think, Goebel?”
“It can’t hurt.”
“Should we call the police, check to see if there have been any accidents in that area? Maybe Chris is in a car somewhere and needs help. Maybe he’s stranded.” Toots’s voice was laced with new worry.
“Sophie, you said you saw something red in your vision, right?” Abby questioned.
“Yes, a very bright red. It had little sparkles in it, almost like there was a gold-colored glitter mixed in with the paint. And the snow, wouldn’t that mean something, Goebel? If he’s in the Lake Tahoe area, he could be at one of those damned ski resorts. Stuck without phone reception.” Sophie was excited. Maybe her vision really did mean something, maybe she and Chris were connected psychically.
Abby yanked her phone out of her pocket. She placed her hand over the mouthpiece. “I’m calling one of my sources at the police department. Give me a minute.” She stepped outside on the deck.
Now in full-blown investigator mode, Goebel asked, “Do any of you know if Chris has any friends in the area? Any business he might have had? A reason for being in the Nevada area?”
“Chris has friends all over the country. If he had business to attend, I don’t know that he would’ve told anyone, especially me. He’s a grown man. He comes and goes as he pleases,” Toots explained. She’d never had a reason to question Chris’s business practices, and now she wished she had been a bit more nosy. In a motherly way, of course.












