Fortune and Glory (Stephanie Plum 27)
“I have options.”
“I bet,” Lula said. “Probably involve a happy hour. Or at least twenty minutes.” She pulled Potts to his feet and pointed him at the door. “Time to go,” she said. “Auntie Lula is driving.”
* * *
I moved from the second floor to the lobby, where the air was better. Two uniforms arrived and I sent them upstairs. I knew plainclothes would follow. I was hoping it wasn’t Morelli. I gave up a sigh of relief when Tom Schmidt walked in. I went to high school with Tom. He graduated into plainclothes a year after Morelli. He was a good cop. Not as talented as Morelli, but he was honest, and he cared about the law.
“Looks like you’re pulling the night shift,” I said to him.
“Yeah, lucky me. What do we have here?”
“A very dead body in 2B. The name on the mailbox is Alice Smuther. I was looking for a hooker going by Patches. I don’t know what Patches looked like but I’m guessing she’s lying on the floor upstairs.”
“Do you have anything else that’s interesting to tell me?”
“She was servicing Charlie Shine. Do you have anything interesting to tell me?”
“No, but I saw your picture online and you looked real cute jumping out of the hotel window.”
“I didn’t jump. I dropped. Big difference. Huge difference.”
“Did you remove anything from the crime scene? Are your fingerprints all over everything?”
“No. And no. I can leave now, right?”
“Yeah. I know where to find you.”
I went outside and called Ranger. “I need a ride,” I told him. “I’m on Parker Street. Just look for all the squad cars and EMT trucks.”
“This is the homicide that just got called in?”
“Yep. Dead hooker. Close friend of Charlie Shine.”
The line went dead. I hoped that meant he was on his way.
Seven minutes later, Ranger snaked his way through the cluster of cars and trucks in front of the peace symbol building and picked me up.
“Thanks,” I said. “Lula didn’t want to wait for the police, so I loaned her my car.”
“I’m guessing this has something to do with the treasure hunt. Were you able to look around before the police arrived?”
“No. She’d been dead awhile. The smell was really bad. I’m surprised her neighbor didn’t investigate.”
“You don’t go looking for trouble in this neighborhood,” Ranger said. “Tell me about her.”
“I knew Shine liked the ladies, so Lula and I talked to a couple of her hooker friends earlier tonight on Stark Street. They gave us the address.”
Ranger left Parker Street, turning toward the center of the city. “Is it important that you get home tonight?”
“No. Rex has lots of food and fresh water.”
* * *
Ranger owned a stealth office building that was located on a quiet side street in the middle of downtown Trenton. The façade was brick and low-key. A small gold plaque by the impact glass front door had a single word on it. Rangeman. The man at the desk in the modest lobby was armed and dressed in Rangeman black. The interior of the building was high-tech and more secure than the White House. The heart of the operation, the control room, was located on the fifth floor. Ranger’s lair was on the seventh floor. His clients were for the most part wealthy businessmen who for one reason or another needed personalized security services that went beyond the norm.
Ranger drove into the underground garage that housed the fleet cars and Ranger’s personal cars. He parked in his slot next to the elevator and reminded me that until we were in his apartment, we were on an audio and video security feed. I’d been in the building many times before. Sometimes with Ranger and sometimes without Ranger when he’d been off-site and I needed a safe haven.
We went directly to Ranger’s apartment, which occupied the entire floor. When he bought the building, he’d turned it over to a design firm. He was probably sleeping with the designer at the time, because the color palette and furnishings were perfect. Simple, modern, comfortable. White walls. Furnishings in black, gray, brown, and cream. Elegantly masculine. Small state-of-the-art kitchen. Everything kept immaculate by his housekeeper, Ella.