sat on the edge of the coffee table, facing her. âWe need to take that car back before someone reports it stolen. Iâll ask Judy. She can do it. You and I are going to talk. I need to know everything about Alana Martin.â
After some seconds went by, Kylie said, âWhy?â
She shook her head. âItâs related to a case Iâm doing. I canât discuss that with you, but itâs extremely important that I know what happened that night. Why did she go to the party? Who was she going to meet? She must have said something to you. What can you tell me about her friends and the men she knew? Donât move. Iâm going to call Judy.â Crossing the room, C.J. picked up the phone. âYou need to give her Alanaâs address and the key to the car.â
The key was in the pocket of Kylieâs shorts. She could almost feel it vibrating against her hip. A feeling of lightness was rushing through her, and everything suddenly seemed so clear, so perfectly obvious. Sliding her bag over her shoulder, she went around the coffee table, past an armchair, then toward the foyer. âThis is so interesting. You have this big important legal thing you canât talk about, and I have information you want. I might know a lot about Alana. It depends.â
C.J. turned around with the phone in her hand. âWhat do you mean, it depends? Depends on what?â
Kylie sent her a little smile. âI canât talk to you if Iâm not here, can I?â As C.J.âs mouth dropped open, Kylie ran for the door. âStop! Where are you going? Wait!â
She slammed the door on her way out, leaped off the porch, and sped across the yard. She skidded to a stop at the end of the brick walkway and dug the key out of her pocket as the front door swung open.
âKylie! Stop!â C.J. almost tripped in her high heels. âCome back!â
Kylie spun around. âI am not going to Pensacola! If you want something from me, you can pay for it!â
She sprinted to where she had parked the car, unlocked it, and got in, slamming down the lock. The tires screeched when she stepped on the gas. Before she turned onto Bayshore, she looked in the rearview and saw C.J. Dunn standing in the middle of the street fifty yards back with her hands in her hair.
chapter EIGHT
judy Mazzio said, âYou couldnât stop her?â â You try to catch a teenager in sneakers with a head start.â C.J. threw one high-heeled Prada, then the other, at the sofa. âI hope she gets arrested for car theft.â
âDo you really?â
âNo.â C.J. fished a pair of scuffed flats from under the coffee table. âIâd have to go get her skinny little butt out of jail. You should have heard her. âThank you for caring whether I live or die.â Thatâs something you expect out of the mouth of a thirteen-year-old. I thought sheâd be . . . I donât know. Nicer.â
âEdgar likes her. He says sheâs spunky.â
âEdgar likes everyone. I need some coffee. I need it bad. Letâs talk in the kitchen.â
âBetter make it decaf,â Judy said with an arch of her brow.
Standing in the doorway, C.J. sighed at the mess, then spotted one of her three cats on the counter. âGet down, you!â He leaped off and walked calmly to his dish, tail switching. âWhen I have a spare minute, Iâm going
to interview housekeepers.â She waved Judy away from the sink and retrieved the coffee carafe herself. âIâll do it. Go have a seat.â
Judy pulled out a chair at the bistro table under the window and shifted aside a weekâs worth of newspapers. âHave a good time last night?â
âYes, I did, thank you.â
âAnd how is Señor Wonderful?â Judyâs attitude was showing. She thought that Billy Medina had the morals of an alley cat, that he would dump C.J. one day, and that she deserved
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