Trespassers Will Be Prostituted.
Trespassers Will Be Prostituted
Gotcha Detective Agency Mystery #9
Jamie Lee Scott
Trespassers Will Be Prostituted
A Gotcha Detective Agency Novel
Jamie Lee Scott
Copyright © 2017, 2018 by Jamie Lee Scott
Second Edition
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This book is a work of fiction. The names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the writer’s imagination or have been used fictitiously, and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to persons, living or dead, actual events, locales or organizations is entirely coincidental.
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All rights are reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission from the author.
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This book is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This book may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each person you share it with. If you're reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then you should return to Smashwords.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the author's work.
Contents
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Also by Jamie Lee Scott:
Prologue
1. Charles
2. Charles
3. Charles
4. Charles
5. Charles
6. Charles
7. Mimi
8. Charles
9. Mimi
10. Charles
11. Mimi
12. Charles
13. Mimi
14. Charles
15. Mimi
16. Charles
17. Mimi
18. Charles
19. Charles
Epilogue
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About the Author
Other books by Jamie Lee Scott
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Gotcha Detective Agency Series
Let Us Prey
Textual Relations
Death of a Sales Rep
What a Meth
Bad Vice
Electile Dysfunction
Who Gives A Split
Mary Had a Little Scam
Trespassers Will Be Prostituted
The Knife Before Christmas
A Lie In Every Truth
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Willa Friday Culinary Cozy Mysteries
Pasta, Pinot & Murder
Sushi, Sauvignon & Murder
Mousse, Moscato & Murder
More coming in late 2018
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Authors live by word of mouth, and reviews really help with exposure. I’d really appreciate if you’d take a few minutes to review this novel at your favorite book retailers. Thanks so much.
Prologue
Mimi
It had been months since I actually enjoyed what I did for a living. I barely remember looking forward to getting out of bed, even though I’m not a morning person because I loved what I did. Now, I dreaded getting up, getting dressed, and tracking down the miserable scum that I had to deal with on a daily basis. It wasn’t something I could discuss with my boyfriend, Nick Christianson, who is a homicide detective, because the scum he deals with is a hundred times worse. We talked several times about getting away together, even if just for the weekend, but nothing ever seemed to work out. Then two days ago, Nick came home with a brochure for a private villa in Italy.
It had been so long since I had left the country that I didn’t even know whether my passport had expired, or where it was. After forty-five minutes of rummaging around in drawers and suitcases, I found my passport in the side pocket of a makeup case. That made no sense at all, but there it was, and it was up-to-date, so I had no excuse not to schedule some time away from my business, the Gotcha Detective Agency, and finally take a vacation.
I’d been pretty pleased with the outfit I’d picked out. It was my typical black, with stretch pants, a long sleeved black cotton shirt, and black and green Chucks (Chuck Taylor Converse sneakers). Comfortable and perfect for sprinting through an airport if needed. The shoes were easy to get on and off at security, and I wore no jewelry. Too much of a hassle when traveling. But I made sure I packed some cute pieces to wear once we arrived in Italy.
I looked down at my suitcase and realized I was going to have to sit on it in order to zip it shut. We weren’t even going to be gone for an entire week, but I had enough clothes to last three months. I didn’t want to get there and realize I’d forgotten something, or that I’d rather wear this outfit than that outfit, so I packed everything I could think of. I looked at the weather app on my phone to see what kind of temperatures to expect this time of the year and started from there. When I looked across the bed at Nick’s suitcase, I realized he hadn’t even started packing yet, and our flight left in five hours.
“Nick, when did you plan on packing?” I yelled toward the bathroom.
Nick walked into the bedroom with just a towel wrapped around his waist, water still dripping from his dark wavy hair. “I’ll get there.” He dropped the towel from around his middle and wiped his hair dry, then open the closet and pulled out a suit. Wait, a suit? It made me forget his naked body in a hurry.
“You’re going to wear a suit on the plane?” I asked.
Nick looked at me, guilt flooding his expression. “I just have to go into the office for an hour or so, then we can leave.”
I shook my head. I should have known he wasn’t going to go a full day without going into the office. I should’ve scheduled the flight for nine o’clock in the morning, so he’d have had to pack the night before. We’d be on the road and he wouldn’t have time to go to work for an hour or so.
“I have to pack for you?” I had a hard time keeping the irritation from my voice.
“I can pack for myself,” Nick sighed.
He continued to put on his dress shirt and slacks, then sat on the bed and pulled on socks and a pair of saddle shoes. He leaned over to lace them up before standing up and walking to the door.
“No way! You’re packing before you leave for the office. We aren’t doing this last-minute crap.” I sounded like such a nag, but I couldn’t help myself.
Nick pulled on his shoulder holster and strapped it across his chest. He put his Glock in place, and adjusted it underneath his shoulder. Without a word, he opened his dresser drawers and started throwing socks, underwear, jeans, and T-shirts in the suitcase without folding them. Before I could say anything, he slammed open the closet door and threw four pairs of shoes into the suitcase, walked into the bathroom where I could hear some rummaging, returned with a small shave kit, and threw it on top of all of the clothes. “There. Packed.”
I started to complain, to tell him that he couldn’t pack that way, but the tone of his voice made me keep my mouth shut. He didn’t even look back at me as he walked out of the bedroom and out of the house.
He never left the ho
use without giving me a kiss and telling me he loved me.
“Well, that was just great,” I said to no one.
Lola must’ve thought I was talking to her, because she chose that moment to walk into the room and stand in the doorway, staring at me with her head cocked.
“Oh, don’t worry, you’re going to be pissed at me in a few minutes, too. You get to stay an entire week with Grandma Lydia. Aren’t you lucky?”
My mother was not a dog person, and she was definitely not a Lola person. They tolerated each other, but they didn’t like each other. At least Lola would get to spend most of the day with Uta before she had to go home at night with my mother. This was a much better alternative than sending her to a kennel. I couldn’t imagine Lola in a kennel. She would howl from the moment she walked out of my sight until the moment we picked her up. And then she’d sulk for a week after we got home.
It took every ounce of energy I had not to arrange Nick’s suitcase more neatly. I wanted to fold everything put it in place and make sure he had plenty of room, then add the extras he didn’t think about as he was throwing his stuff willy-nilly into the suitcase. If he didn’t have what he needed, I wasn’t going to listen to him complain once we got there.
This is why I don’t take vacations. The stress leading up to it: the packing, the arranging the appointments, and then getting on the darn plane. You lose a day before and a day at the end just making your travel arrangements.
Lola jumped up and laid down at the foot of the bed. And I wondered for a moment if I could get her to sit on top of my suitcase once I closed it. That would make it much easier to zip. No way. She knew exactly what was going on, which accounted for her sullen mood.
Suddenly, her ears perked up. She looked to the doorway, then let out a low growl.
A fraction of a second later, I heard a knock at the front door. No one ever knocks on our front door unless it’s some sort of door-to-door salesman, which you never see anymore, or someone who was lost. I was tempted not to even answer. But then, my curiosity got the better of me.
I adjusted my bathrobe and tightened the tie around my middle, wishing I’d gotten dressed instead of just laying the clothes out on the bed. I followed Lola to the door, where she sat at attention, still growling. I looked through the peephole to see Jeb Bexley standing at my front door.
Bexley was a preacher at the prominent New Faith church in Salinas, and he had been a recent client. Seeing him at my door was a little unsettling. I don’t know why it unsettled me, but it did.
I opened the door and said, “Hello, Mr. Bexley, what are you doing here?”
The sun had yet to burn through the thick fog that morning, and it even looked like it might rain. Oh, wait, this was California. We hadn’t had rain in almost a decade. Not real rain anyway (be careful what you wish for).
It had been weeks since I had seen him, and he didn’t look any better now than he had back then. He had been accused of killing his wife, arrested for it, and then let go when it turned out his son was the real killer.
“I just wanted to let you know that I came from the jail today. He’s going to plead guilty.”
The “he” he was talking about being his son.
This case had been put to rest several weeks ago, but seeing Jeb at my door, with the ominous sky behind him, brought me back to the gruesome murder scene. I hadn’t actually seen his dead wife at the scene, just what was left behind.
“I thought we already knew that.” I tried to sound compassionate, but I didn’t understand why Jeb was at my house. If he needed to see me, he should’ve gone to the office. We were not friends; he had just been a client.
I know that sounds callous, but I can’t have every client stopping by my house. It can be dangerous. I didn’t have to ask how he knew where I lived. His son had visited me when we were investigating Mary Bexley’s murder.
“I stop by the office, but they said you were leaving for vacation. In fact, I think they said that you’d already left. But I thought I’d stop by and take a chance.”
The desperation in his face almost had me inviting him inside, but I wasn’t dressed, and Lola was agitated. “What can I help you with?”
“I just thought that I would let you know that he’s talking. He’s finally explaining what happened.”
When Jeb’s son had originally been arrested for the murder of his mother, he refused to speak. He wouldn’t say if he was guilty or not guilty, and he never explained why he killed his mother. Then finally, he worked with the psychologist and his attorney, and agreed to a plea of guilty, so he wouldn’t get the death penalty.
“What did he say?” Now I was curious. What goes through a teenage boy’s head when he beats his mother over the head and then stabs her to death?
“Apparently, Mary and I weren’t as stealthy about arguing is we thought we were. He told me he’d heard us arguing too many times, that he wondered why we were still married. And then that night, when he saw his mother with her best friend’s husband and his best friend’s father, and he just couldn’t understand how she could hurt the people who loved her so much. He’d gone to the hotel room to talk to her, but he said she was angry and screamed at him to get out.”
She was probably embarrassed, I thought.
“He said she came at him, pounding her fists and telling him just to get out, get out. He had the tire iron in his hand that he had planned to use for self-defense, because he figured this was not a good neighborhood. And he didn’t know whose door he might knock on in the process of finding her. When she flipped out on him, he raised the tire iron and slammed it across her head. And then the rage took over, and he grabbed the knife and stabbed her. He said he didn’t even know how many times he stabbed her, but she must have been dead before he stabbed her, because the blood didn’t spurt everywhere.”
“What about her fingers? Why did he cut off her fingers?” I’d wanted to know this from the beginning, even though I had a pretty good idea.
Bexley looked green when he explained. “So she wouldn’t be easily identified. And if I hadn’t hired you, and you hadn’t known the homicide detectives investigating the murder, she may never have been identified.”
“What a coincidence,” I said.
Bexley shook his head. “Not coincidence. Divine intervention. God heard my prayers.”
Okay, that worked too.
I tried to imagine the rage in this kid. He’d been doing steroids, which had its own anger inducing effects, but to be so full of rage as to bash your mother in the head and then stab her to death? And then have the calm sense to cut off her fingers. It’s just not something I would ever understand, but I hoped I never had to. I looked at Jeb’s ashen face, and felt compassion for him. He still had two sons to raise. I didn’t understand how he could have such compassion for this child, after the kid had killed the love of his life. They may not have had a great marriage, but I do think she was Jeb’s one true love.
“I’m glad you got him to talk. Do you feel better, knowing?”
He looked at the ground. “I don’t think I’ll ever feel better again. I lost my wife, and then I lost my son. I don’t know if there’s any way to ever get him back. And I know that I will never see him without a piece of glass between us, and I’ll never be able to touch him again. He had so many hopes and dreams, and he let anger and rage take his life away. Took my wife and his mother from us. My heart is broken.” He wiped his nose with the back of his forearm.
I felt my heart break a little. He looked me in the eyes now. “I just thought you should know. But I also thought you should know that the tone in his voice, well…there’s no remorse. I just don’t understand how I could’ve raised such a monster.”
I don’t have kids. I wasn’t sure I’d ever want them. But I did know this: “You can only do the best you can. You aren’t responsible for everything they do.”
“In this case, I was responsible. If I hadn’t been so selfish and held on to Mary like she was my lifeline, this ne
ver would’ve happened. I should have forced her to stop what she was doing, or gotten a divorce. If I had done that, she’d still be alive, and my son wouldn’t be a murderer.”
I wanted to reach out and touch him, comfort him, but I stayed in the house.
“Jeb, don’t do this to yourself. You can’t look back and say should’ve, could’ve, would’ve. Life doesn’t work that way. You have to move on. You have two other sons that need guidance.”
Jeb turned and walked down the two steps headed away from the house. He didn’t even turn around to look at me again. And I’m pretty sure I heard him say, “I just wanted to thank you.”
I watched as he got in his car to leave. As he pulled away from the curb, Charles Parks’s car pulled into my driveway.
“Hey, Sweet Cheeks, were you standing there waiting for me?” he said as he walked up the path.
Lola practically knocked me over trying to get to Charles. He patted her on the head and kept walking. Lola followed him like a silly puppy.
“What are you doing here?” It came out sharper than I’d planned.
He ignored my tone. “Got any coffee?”
“Are we out of it at the office?” I opened the door wide for him to come in, since he hadn’t slowed his pace.
“No. I just wanted to see you off, and wish you well. It must be nice to get away from it all,” he said, smug as ever.