Ms America and the Villainy in Vegas (Beauty Queen Mysteries No. 2) (24 page)

BOOK: Ms America and the Villainy in Vegas (Beauty Queen Mysteries No. 2)
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CHAPTER THIRTY

“Guard!” I shriek, before I realize the guard is already in my room, standing against the opposite wall. Sally Anne is next to him.

“It’s all right, already!” Frank says. “Jeez! What do I have to do to make people stop thinking I’m a menace?”

Right now he does look more victim than assailant. He’s got gauze wrapped around his head like those wounded soldiers in World War I documentaries.

He eyes me. “They tell me you’re gonna be okay. That true?”

“I hope so. They tell me the same thing.”

“I am really glad to hear you say that.” He shakes his head. “This is craziness. First Danny, then Cassidy …” His voice tails off.

Sally Anne steps closer and rubs his back. “We were both big-time worried about you, Happy. I brought you this.” She sets a lavender and white striped cosmetics bag with the Crowning Glory logo on my bedside table next to the roses and salt water taffy. “A few items from the store I think you’ll like having.”

“Thank you, Sally Anne.” I note she and Frank seem more at ease together than at any time since Danny’s murder. “How is your head?” I ask Frank.

“They tell me I got a concussion. I got a helluva headache and some ringing in the ears but all things considered”—he shrugs—“I’m making out good.”

“You didn’t see who hit you?”

“Ain’t got a clue. I was heading for the cryogenic chamber and bam! That’s all she wrote. Listen.” He motions to the chair behind him. “Mind if I sit down? I got something I wanna show you. Shoulda done it before but I’m doing it now.”

“Better late than never,” Sally Anne says.

“Sure,” I say. He’s got me curious.

Sally Anne passes him a manila folder.

“She’s in on everything now, by the way,” Frank tells me. “No more secrets.”

Sally Anne points at him but looks at me. “After all this I still wanna marry the guy. You believe that?”

Frank hands me some documents.

I glance at them. “These are bank statements.”

“Yup. The account’s in my name but the cash is all Danny’s.”

I shake my head, not understanding.

“The two of us had an arrangement,” Frank goes on. “He knew I needed cash because of my gambling situation. So one day he says to me, tell you what, Uncle Frankie. How about you set up a bank account and I put money in it and you use that money any which way you see fit to pay off your debts. Only the deal is, you don’t tell nobody about the account.”

“And you didn’t? Until now?”

“I kept mum.”

“So you never told Detective Perelli about this account.”

“Not a word. Now, I gotta tell you, I regret that.” He lowers his head. Sally Anne rubs his shoulder.

I look at the statements. They go back several months. The most recent shows a balance of $103,078.46. Each statement shows a few deposits, all in even amounts like $5000, $10,000, or $20,000. And all via Paypal transfer.

I look at Frank. My brain cells start to jostle. “Remember I told you that Cassidy told me that Danny was blackmailing somebody?”

He nods.

“I bet the person he was blackmailing made these deposits. Did you notice they got a lot bigger just recently?”

“Yup.”

“They start out at five thousand, then they go to ten thousand, then they jump all the way to twenty. I bet Danny started demanding more money and the person he was blackmailing saw no end in sight and so they decided there was only one way to make it stop.” Frank meets my gaze. “To kill Danny.”

We’re all quiet then. I glance back down at the statements. It’s also possible, I realize, that these deposits could represent embezzled money, from Samantha, for example. Going through Paypal is less easily traceable than a direct transfer from bank to bank so it might have been Danny’s preferred method of transaction.

“I don’t see a lot of withdrawals,” I point out.

Frank shakes his head. “I didn’t like using that money.”

Probably because in his heart of hearts Frank knew this cash was obtained the old-fashioned way: it was stolen. “You know, Frank, in a way Danny was doing you a favor with this money and in a way he wasn’t.”

“What do you mean?” Sally Anne wants to know.

“Having the bank account in Frank’s name distanced Danny from the illegal activity, whether it was blackmailing or embezzling or whatever. That’s why the cops didn’t find it in their investigation. I’m sure they analyzed Danny’s bank accounts but they wouldn’t necessarily have analyzed Frank’s.”

“I don’t know if they did or not. But this account is in a different bank than where I have my regular checking and savings.”

“On top of that, Danny had you over a barrel because he knew you would try to keep the fact that you still had gambling debts piling up a secret.”

“He coulda told me!” Sally Anne cries. “I woulda understood!”

“I knew all this was fishy,” Frank says. “I told myself I was gonna do something about it. But I never did.”

Since I have a Paypal account myself, I know that each time there’s a transaction I’m alerted to it via email. I ask Frank if he received those emails.

“Never saw a one.”

“So Danny must’ve been receiving them. He had all the info on the bank account, right? So he could’ve linked an email address to it.” I frown. “But I’m sure Detective Perelli has been investigating Danny’s email. So how did she not see the emails from Paypal? Unless Danny had a secret account for those, too.”

My mind is racing. I wonder if Danny had been communicating with the person he was blackmailing via email. If so, and if I can find that account, I may well learn the identity of Danny’s blackmailing victim. Who probably morphed from victim into killer when it came to Danny. And Cassidy. And me.

CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE

“I need to tell Detective Perelli about this,” I say. “I bet she can subpoena Paypal to get them to tell her who was the source of these cash transfers.”

Frank raises no objection. “Whatever happens to me happens. It’s time for me to pay for what I done.”

Sally Anne rubs his shoulder again. I get the idea she’d do a jailhouse wedding with Frank Richter if it came to that.

Frank stands up. “We’ll get outa your hair now. Just so you know, Happy, I got a lotta regrets about how I handled this situation. I shoulda been upfront with you about everything from the get-go. If I had been, who knows? Maybe Cassidy’d be alive today. And you”—he points at me—“I don’t even wanna think about what mighta happened to you if you hadn’t gotten that siren going.”

I don’t, either. But it’s going to be really, really hard to forget.

The guard escorts out Frank and Sally Anne and I use the bedside phone to call the LVMPD. The operator connects me to Detective Perelli and I fill her in on Frank’s secret bank account revelation.

“I’ll send somebody over there to pick up those statements,” she says. “You know how many opportunities I gave Frank Richter to divulge this information?”

Me, too, I want to say. “How long do you think it’ll take to find out who made the Paypal transfers?”

“Today’s Saturday. The earliest I’ll get anything is Monday.”

Anything could happen by Monday. Already two people are dead.

I shudder. Almost three.

“There may be another way to find that email account,” Detective Perelli goes on. “It’s a long shot.”

Nothing revs up this beauty queen like those two words strung together.

“We were able to get into Richter’s computer,” she goes on, “because Flanagan told us his usual password. And guess what we found in his personal documents? One encrypted file. We can’t get into it because we can’t come up with the password.”

That encrypted file has to contain information Danny wanted no one else to see. “You’re thinking he might have information related to the blackmailing in that file?”

“For example, the email account info. Remember this. If Richter was engaging in blackmail, he would not have used his usual email address or any email address that identified him.”

“You mean … he wouldn’t have used one that included his name.”

“Right. And if he had to use something unusual it might have been hard for him to remember it. So he had to write it down.”

“But …” I struggle to keep everything straight. “The password to get into that encrypted file is probably not that hard to remember. Or he had to write that down, too.”

“If he wrote that down, we can’t find it anywhere.”

“Are you willing to email that encrypted file to me?”

She hesitates, then, “Why not? Knock yourself out.”

Clearly she does not expect me to come up with anything, which makes this the kind of challenge I like.

Not to mention that success might lead to nabbing a killer.

I turn my brain upside down, left, right, and sideways to try to come up with passwords Danny might have used to open that encrypted file. I am interrupted by the delightful news that I am soon to be released. “Soon” turns out to mean “in several hours” but in the end I need the time to get beautified for my hospital exit. Shanelle and Trixie return as promised.

“We bought you a little something.” Trixie unveils a cute-as-can-be strapless dress in a blue, green, and brown print with a swishy pleated skirt. A thin glossy black belt accentuates the waist. Shanelle holds up a pair of platform T-strap sandals in black and nude suede.

“That’s more than a little something!” I protest, but not too vigorously. “Thank you so much, you two.”

We have another teary moment before Trixie buckles down to applying my makeup. Depending what part of my face she’s working on, she alternately shushes me and encourages me to speak as I relay the latest 411. Trixie and Shanelle add a few possibilities to my Danny Passwords list.

There is quite the media crush outside the hospital for my release. Even though it’s already dark outside, just for fun I wear Shanelle’s big Jackie O-style sunglasses. I feel like a total celebrity being whisked from the hospital exit to the waiting police van, complete with my posse of Trixie, Shanelle, Jason, my mom, and the armed guard. Camera flashes go off in my face like nobody’s business. I take no questions although many are shouted at me.

We settle in the van and it pulls away. “I’m too excited to just go back to the hotel!” Trixie cries. “Plus Happy looks so cute in her new outfit, she should show it off.”

“Plus I’m starving,” Shanelle adds, “and we have three whole hours before we’ve got to be at the theater. Let’s go out to eat. You up for it, girl?” she asks me.

“I’m game.” I ate almost nothing at the hospital. Maybe food will aid the Think Of Danny’s Password process.

“You feel woozy for one second, we’re leaving,” Jason says.

“I want to go to that hotel with the canals,” my mother declares. She hits me in the arm. Apparently she’s recovered from my near-death experience. “I been here all week and you never once took me to that place!” My mom is blissfully unaware that indeed I have been to the Rialto Hotel and that the visit was, shall we say, memorable.

All of us except the guard ooh and aah over the canals and the gondolas and the ceilings painted to look like the evening sky over Venice.

“It’s exactly like we’re in Italy,” Trixie remarks as we stroll across a bridge that arches over the canal. “Not that I’ve ever been there so I don’t really know.”

“Who needs to go to Europe after they’ve been here?” my mother wants to know.

“It is amazing how much of Vegas is like this,” I say. “You’re in a gigantic modern hotel but you’d think you’re in ancient Rome. You’re in a subterranean mall but you’d bet you’re in the middle of Venice.”

“It’s like how we’re Sparklettes this week.” Trixie giggles. “We’re not
really
dancers even though we try to make everybody think we are when we’re on stage.”

As usual we’re in the mood for Italian food. With the guard close at hand, we settle at an “outdoor” café beside the canal and order a round of Bellini cocktails. For everybody but me, that is. I’m sticking to soft drinks tonight.

“What’s in this?” my mother asks.

Shanelle reads the description from the menu. “Peach nectar with Prosecco.”

“Italian sparkling wine,” I clarify. “You had it at Brutus’s Palace.”

“Not bad,” my mother pronounces after her first sip.

The restaurant serves family style. We share grilled calamari, squash-filled ravioli, chicken with olives and potatoes, and amaretti pudding for dessert.

“You two will work this off performing,” I tell Shanelle and Trixie. “All I’m going to do tonight is sit on my butt like I did all day.”

“Today is not the day to be worrying about your figure,” Jason tells me.

He’s got a point.

We’ve just stood up from dinner when I notice the same female gondolier I saw when I was here with Hans Finkelmeister. Like last time, she’s singing an operatic tune.

I stop to watch. Something about her seems really familiar but I can’t put my finger on what. It hits me when we’re piling back into the police van to return to the Cosmos. “That woman gondolier we just saw. She was at the recording studio when I went looking for Travis Blakely.”

“You went to a recording studio?” My mom narrows her eyes at me. “Nice of you to take me with you.”

“Maybe she works there, too,” Shanelle says. “This gig is probably part time.”

At the Cosmos, Shanelle and Trixie remain in the van to continue on to the theater. I’m sad I can’t perform with the Sparklettes again but I am eager to get onto my laptop to see if any of the passwords on my list bust open that encrypted file.

I log on ASAP to see that Detective Perelli emailed me the file as promised. I try every password on my list but none of them does the job.

I am discouraged but undaunted. After all, we beauty queens know that the key to winning is hard work and discipline beyond what others are willing to do.

My mom makes such a fuss over me staying the night in our shared room that I agree. And since Jason refuses to let me out of his sight, either, he’s staying, too.

So we’ll be a little tight. I like having my family around me.

Jason claims the desk, pushing my laptop aside and declaring he needs to prep for the upcoming week’s coursework on frame jigs and suspension. This I find astonishing, as it’s Saturday night and the baseball playoffs are on. I have never seen such behavior on my husband’s part. Pit school is changing him. There’s no doubt about it.

My mom settles down to couponing and I climb into a hot bubble bath. Maybe I’ll have a password brainstorm. The armed guard in the corridor and Jason only yards away are making me feel safe and protected.

I soak among the bubbles and try to force my mind in a productive direction. I feel so,
so
close to knowing who killed Danny and Cassidy.

But while close may be good for horseshoes and hand grenades, it doesn’t cut it when it comes to homicide.

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