Chapter 24

Sanders served Griffin coffee while he checked his e-mail. “Would you care for anything else, sir?”

“No, nothing.” Griffin opened the e-mail from Lieutenant Craig Stovall, Baytown PD. Stovall had been the lead detective on the Kelley Fleming murder case two years ago. Ben Sullivan would be in Baytown by morning, looking for a photo of Kelley and digging up all the information he could find.

Scanning the message quickly, Griffin hit PRINT, then turned to Sanders who was halfway across the room. “Wait up.”

Sanders pivoted quickly. “Yes, sir?”

“See if you can track down Jim Norton,” Griffin said. “If you can, ask him to drop by this evening if he will. I have several other phone calls to make.”

Sanders nodded.

Griffin telephoned Ben Sullivan, issued him some last minute orders, then phoned Judd Walker’s room.

“Walker here.”

“Judd, it’s Griffin. I just received an e-mail from Lieutenant Stovall from the Baytown PD. He’ll fax me a crime scene photo of Kelley Fleming tomorrow morning, but he went ahead and gave me the basic info on her. The woman was forty, had lived in Baytown for only a couple of years. She worked as a waitress. Didn’t have any close friends. Lived in a duplex apartment. Kept to herself. The neighbors said a teenage boy lived with her, but the police didn’t have any luck tracking down the kid. He wasn’t enrolled in school and nobody even knew his name.”

“That’s interesting,” Judd said.

“Gets more interesting. Kelley Fleming was an alias. Her driver’s license, social security card—everything—was bogus. They ran an article about her and the only photo they had of her in the newspaper, asking anyone who had information to come forward, but got no response.”

“Do you think Quinn might have known this woman under a different name?”

“Possibly. We’ll show him the crime scene photo and see if he recognizes her.”

“Did the police think maybe the kid killed her?”

“That was one theory and a boyfriend was another, but they never found the kid or a boyfriend,” Griffin said.

“Could be the teenage boy was her boyfriend.”

“Could be. Another theory was that the murderer might have been a serial killer, but when they checked for similar murders, they came up with zero. But if she was the first…Quinn’s involved in this somehow, someway. He didn’t murder these five women, but someone is killing them because they were involved with Quinn.”

“That means Kelley Fleming or whoever the hell she was must have been one of Quinn’s girlfriends.”

“Why would someone want to kill Quinn’s girlfriends?”

“Jealousy,” Judd said. “A woman who wants Quinn all to herself and is killing off the competition.”

“Hmm…Or a man who hates Quinn and wants to pin these murders on him.”

“Quinn has probably made a lot of enemies over the years, broken quite a few female hearts and pissed off more than his share of men.”

“Looking for a possible murderer among Quinn’s enemies will be like looking for a needle in a haystack.”

Quinn held Annabelle in his arms as they danced slowly, languidly to the soft strains of a quiet-times, cool jazz number playing on the radio. The alto sax mourned low and sweet, while the bass strummed the lazy beat. With her head on his shoulder and her arms draped around his neck, Annabelle sighed. When, with very little interruption, one tune ended and another began, they barely noticed and stayed in each other’s arms, their bodies continuing to sway. As the next tune began, a moody, melancholy rendition of “Body and Soul,” Quinn brushed his lips across her temple and down her cheekbone.

Nothing had ever felt this right. Being with Annabelle, holding her, dancing with her, kissing her. Despite the horrors surrounding them—the unsolved murders in which he was a suspect—they had been able to separate themselves from the rest of the world this afternoon and evening. After tender, loving hours spent on the sofa in each other’s arms, Quinn had called Chez Philippe for dinner reservations. They had dined on one of Chef Jose’s specialties—filet de veau. After dinner, Quinn had ordered chilled champagne and an assortment of desserts to be delivered to their room.

For the past hour, they had been sipping champagne, nibbling on chocolates and dancing. Mostly dancing. Neither wanted to be out of touching distance. And the closer, the better.

Quinn had spent hours making love to a woman before and he’d also enjoyed his share of quickies. He had wined and dined plenty of lovely ladies. And on occasion he had forgone any preliminaries and just screwed a woman. But nothing in his past compared to what he was sharing with Annabelle.

They had been making love for endless hours, in the old-fashioned sense that equated to romantic foreplay. Lingering glances, gazing into each other’s eyes. Touching tenderly, caressing, stroking. Kissing, tasting, licking. Every heartbeat connected, every breath simultaneous.

“I wish this night never had to end,” Annabelle told him, her voice enticing, her words seductive.

Leaning his head over onto hers, he whispered, “I wish that, too.”

She inched the fingers of one hand up and into his hair, while the other hand gripped his shoulder. “We can’t pretend there aren’t any problems to be overcome, but—”

“Leave those problems until tomorrow,” he told her as he slid both hands down her back and cupped her buttocks, lifting her up and into his erection. “Tonight, there are no problems. There is no tomorrow.”

As the dreamy music filled Annabelle’s hotel suite, she stopped dancing, stood on tiptoe and kissed Quinn. “No problems. No tomorrow. Only now, tonight and the two of us.”

They kissed again and again, all the while their hands roamed, exploring, discovering. When she was breathless and trembling, Quinn lifted her up and into his arms. She flung her arms around his neck as he carried her across the room to the sofa. He laid her on the soft cushions, then came down over her, balancing his body over hers with his knees and elbows on either side of her. She lifted herself up to meet his kiss. He undid the tiny pearl buttons on her silk blouse, kissing each new inch of flesh he exposed. She mimicked his moves and unbuttoned his shirt, then jerked it free from his pants. While she planted kisses over his smooth, muscular chest, he threaded his fingers through her hair and cradled her head with one hand. When she came up for air, he undid the front hook on her satin bra and spread it apart to reveal her high, round breasts. He couldn’t resist touching them, cupping them in his hands. Each were more than a handful, neither small nor large. Just right. Perfect.

When he flicked her nipples with the pads of this thumbs, she keened softly and arched her back so that her mound aligned with his straining erection.

He was so ready. Wanted her so badly. Needed to be inside her now.

“Oh, Quinn, please…”

He lowered his head and kissed her directly below her breasts, then unzipped her black slacks and smiled when he saw the black satin bikini panties she wore. He shoved the slacks aside and the panties down far enough to expose a glimpse of dark blond hair covering her mound. He licked a path from between her breasts to the edge of that curly hair.

Tugging on her slacks, he managed to maneuver them down her legs and off, taking her panties, too. She lay before him wearing only her open shirt and bra, her body exposed.

“You’re lovely,” he said. “But I knew you would be.”

When she tried to reach for his belt, he gently slapped her hands away. If she touched his penis, he might not be able to wait. And he wanted to wait. There were things he wanted to do before he took her completely.

“Quinn?”

“Later, querida. For now, leave everything to me.”

He spread her legs apart and placed himself between them, then lifted her thighs up and over his shoulders, giving him easy access to his objective. He kissed her inner thighs, first one and then the other. She clutched his shoulders. He licked around her pubic lips, tasting the musky sweetness. She shuddered.

His lips encompassed the soft, pink tissue and sucked gently. Annabelle gasped, then panted when he tongued her clitoris.

“Oh, God, Quinn.”

Her moisture gushed, dampening his mouth. He worked his tongue over her sensitive nub. Relentlessly. Passionately. When he realized she was on the verge of coming, he reached up and pinched her nipples, then rubbed them between his thumbs and index fingers. She cried out, then fell apart, her climax hitting her hard. But he didn’t ease up, didn’t slow down. With his fingers tormenting her breasts, his tongue took her over the edge and beyond, until she was totally spent and begging him to stop. Her body shook and shivered, almost convulsing in the intensity of her orgasms.

Jim and Griffin talked about old times for a good hour, drinking the Guinness beer that Griffin remembered Jim liking so much when they’d worked together a number of years ago on the art store robberies. He’d had Sanders go out and buy this particular brand, just for Jim. They had been college buddies, teammates, even double-dated several times back in the good old days. He knew Jim wanted to ask him about those mysterious ten years of his life when he had disappeared off the face of the earth, but he couldn’t talk about those years, not even to an old friend, a guy he would trust with his life.

When there was a lull in the conversation, Jim asked, “What’s up? It’s not that I’m not enjoying your companionship and your beer, but you didn’t ask Sanders to call me and invite me over just because you wanted to see my ugly face again so soon.”

“Actually, I did have an ulterior motive.”

Jim chuckled. “No kidding?”

“I’ve got a client I believe is innocent and the only way to prove he’s innocent is by finding the guilty party,” Griffin said. “Just like Quinn and Annabelle Vanderley, you and I want the same thing. Hell, all four of us want the same thing.”

“Okay. We all want to find out who murdered Lulu and Kendall.” Jim held up his hand to signal Griffin to let him finish before he spoke. “And yeah, you think the same guy killed both of them and those three other women—the two in Texas and the one in New Orleans.”

“I think we should be working together. Unofficially, of course. We each have resources we can use. There are things you can do that I can’t because I’m not law enforcement. And there are things that I can do that you can’t because I’m a private investigator.”

“If I agree, it would have to be unofficially. So, what comes first?”

“We decide on the most likely scenario,” Griffin said.

“Which would be?”

“A serial killer with a direct tie to Quinn Cortez,” Griffin said. “Either a woman who wants to eliminate the competition or a man seeking revenge. Somebody with a reason to want to hurt Quinn, either by making him feel guilty or by pinning these murders on him.”

“It’s a reasonable scenario.” Jim took another swig from his second bottle of Guinness. “But it works only if Kelley Fleming was one of Cortez’s women.”

“I’m assuming you know what I know about Kelley.” Griffin sipped on the Guinness, a strong, dark, Irish brew.

“And that would be?” Jim smiled.

“Okay, I’ll give first—that her name was an alias, her ID all fake, that she either had a teenage kid or she had a boyfriend who was a teenager.”

“Did you talk to Lieutenant Stovall?”

“I left him a message. He e-mailed me the info. Said he’d fax the crime scene photos in the morning.”

“Then you don’t have a photo of Kelley?”

Griffin shook his head.

Jim placed his beer on the cocktail table, then stuck his hand into his inside coat pocket and pulled out a folded piece of paper. “I talked to Stovall’s partner, a guy named Estes. He faxed me the photos just a few minutes before Sanders called.” Jim opened up the folded sheet and handed it to Griffin. “He sent several shots, but this is the only one that gives you a really good look at her face.”

Griffin took the faxed photograph and studied it carefully. The woman appeared to be sleeping. “She was only forty, according to her phony ID. But she looked older.”

“Maybe she was. Or maybe she’d just lived a rough life.”

“Possibly both.”

“She’s not especially pretty, but not butt ugly either,” Jim said. “Just haggard looking.”

“I know what you’re thinking.”

“Do you?”

“You’re thinking that she’s not Quinn Cortez’s type,” Griffin said. “All four of the other women had something in common, besides being Quinn’s lovers. They were all very attractive women.”

“Kelley might have been attractive at one time.”

“Years ago, maybe, but not two years ago when this photo was taken.”

“Then it could be that there is no connection between her and Cortez. Your theory could be wrong.”

“It could be,” Griffin agreed. “But I don’t think so. Maybe Kelley knew Griffin ten or fifteen years ago, back when she might have been attractive.”

“That blows your theory, too. Why would the killer have waited all those years to murder her? And if he did wait ten or fifteen years to start killing Cortez’s lovers, why start with her? Why leave all the women in between then and now alone?”

“Damn good question.”

“Yeah, and if we can find out the answer, we might be able to figure out who our murderer is.” Jim paused, looked right at Griffin and said, “Unless Cortez turns out to be our guy after all.”