Then again, I liked trifling. Trifling was my middle name. Charlotte Trifling Davdison. Let Papa Mendoza bring the fight to me. I was ready. And I had a fab supernatural entity who could sever his spine in the blink of an eye, should it come to that. So there.
“Carson,” she said when she picked up. I liked it. Clear. Concise. To the point.
I decided to try it myself. “Davidson.”
A loud sigh filtered to me. “Charley, you called me. You can’t just say Davidson.”
“What are you, the phone greeting police?”
“What did you get for me?”
“I didn’t get you anything,” I said, starting to panic. “Are we exchanging friendship bracelets already? I can go get one now.”
“What do you have?”
“I had chlamydia once. Thank God for antibiotics.”
“Did you talk to Brinkman? What did you get off him? Have you heard from his men? Have they threatened you again?”
She was so serious. “Yes, I talked to Brinkman, and no, they haven’t threatened me again. I need a little more time. And I need to talk to Brinkman’s girlfriend, Emily Michaels.”
“Charley, I told you, that is not possible.”
“Do you remember the last two—no, three—cases I closed for you? Where’s the trust?”
“I trust you implicitly. But the men who want Emily Michaels dead are not quite so trustworthy. And either way, I’m not giving you her location.”
“Then can you set up a meet?”
After a long, thoughtful moment, she said, “If it will help this case, I can do that. It will take a couple of days.”
“I only have a couple of hours. I need to see her now.”
She cupped a hand over her phone, and I could only imagine the expletives flying around her. “Give me thirty minutes. I’ll see if I can perform miracles.”
“I have complete faith in you,” I said, giddy with hope. Once I had Emily’s side of things, maybe I could talk some sense into her, since it didn’t work with her boyfriend. There was simply no reason for him to go to prison for a murder that never even happened. He might have to do some time for money laundering, but I’d leave that up to Carson.
* * *
I headed down to the restaurant to grab some breakfast when Cookie came in. She seemed devastated. We sat in a corner booth so we could talk, not that anyone was in. The place didn’t open until eleven, and it was barely eight thirty.
Since none of the servers were in yet, we were served by a very sexy cook whose dimples seemed to calm Cookie down a bit.
“She broke down on the way to school,” Cook said, her heart hurting. “That incident with Quentin really scared her.”
“It scared me, too,” I said, stirring my coffee.
“I guess I didn’t realize how serious it got. I was just so upset that she would skip school and leave campus like that.”
“I was a little surprised as well, but they really like each other. It has me a tad concerned.”
“Why?” Cookie asked, surprised. “Quentin is a lovely boy.”
“And he’s four years older than she is.”
“Three. Amber will be thirteen next week.” She shook her head. “It’s so hard to believe that. She’s just growing up so fast.”
“I’m a little surprised you aren’t more concerned.”
“I would be, normally. He is too old for her, but have you seen that girl?”
Amused, I said, “She’s a knockout, I know. Which is reason enough for my concern.”
“Yeah, but again, Quentin is wonderful, Charley. I’ve never seen Amber so smitten. Except when she sees Reyes Farrow.”
“She does like them older, doesn’t she? Speaking of Quentin, what about the girl in the cable car? Miranda. What did you find out about her?”
She looked into her glass of water and took a drink before answering. “I meant to tell you. We’ve just been so busy. I left the case file on your desk.”
My interest piqued. “And?”
“It looks like she had a very hard life, Charley. I didn’t get very far with the file, but I managed to get a copy of her autopsy, the investigation of her disappearance, and the court transcripts of her mother’s trial.”
“Where is she now? Miranda’s mother?”
“She’s in the women’s correctional facility outside Santa Fe.”
I nodded in thought. “Looks like I’ll be making a trip to Santa Fe very soon. Did they give you a cause of death?”
Cook took another drink. “They said most likely blunt force trauma to the head. She was there over a month before they found her body, so it was hard to get an exact cause.”
Since Cookie wanted to talk about Miranda’s case about as much as she wanted her fingernails pulled out with pliers, I veered back to the subject of Amber. “I’m glad that rascal of yours admitted the truth.”
Cookie relaxed the tight grip on her glass. “I am, too. She was more worried about my reaction to her lying than her skipping school and leaving campus with a boy.”
“Told you,” I said with a wink. “I knew it would eat her alive.”
“Yeah, I totally played it up like she’d broken my heart and I would never be the same again.”
“And she fell for it?”
“Hook, line, and sinker.”
19
Do you believe in love at first sight,