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Cat in a hot pink Pursuit

Cat in a hot pink Pursuit

Titel: Cat in a hot pink Pursuit Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Carole Nelson Douglas
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many homicides. “First response couldn’t do anything for her. Except get the names and addresses of all the owners who’d parked in the vicinity.”
    “Any hot prospects?”
    “Mostly women or women with children. All shocked to death themselves.”
    “That many women? Alone? Shopping this late, in the dark?” Molina asked.
    Dunhill shrugged. “Multitasking. The wife complains afl the time that there aren’t enough hours in the day. All We’ve got here as onsite evidence is a short rubber burn and an air-conditioning puddle over there. Looks like a car stopped fast and stayed long enough to leave traces.”
    “Or to startle and then kill our vie.” Molina glanced up at the brilliant lighting. This poor girl had been “shined” like a deer in the headlights by the very technology meant to protect her.
    “They held the Teen Queen auditions here today,” she observed. “This could be another message.”
    “That’s right! I heard about the mutilated Barbie doll images. You think this is related?”
    “I think this is going to be pretty hard to explain to the press, much less the parents. I’ll ask the captain in the morning for more personnel to put on the so-called Teen Queen Castle that reality TV show is using for the next two weeks. Can you imagine a more captive population for a killer like this?”
    “For this nut? Likes offbeat weapons. Nervy enough to attack in a major public place. No, Lieutenant, I can’t. Hey!” Dunhill was looking beyond her. “Get outa here! Scat!”
    By the time she whipped around, all she spotted was a lean dark shape vanishing under a Nissan Sentra.
    “Damn cat.” Dunhill was not happy. “Sniffing at the evidence. That pinkish gunk.”
    “Probably licking at it. Lots of scavenger cats and birds around a shopping mall. Forensics will have already bagged a sample; don’t worry, officer.”
    “This is my first murder call. Then to have it be a kid like this—”
    “Kids ‘like this’ you never get used to, thank God. What did you say her name was?”
    “Tiffany—” He again checked his notebook. “Cummings.”
    “That contest inside. Find out if she was a contender.”
    “She sure isn’t now.” He slapped his notebook shut. Mariah was still safe at home in her messy bedroom, thank goodness, Molina thought, but tomorrow night she wouldn’t be. Her kid had made the final cut. Tomorrow she’d be in the Teen Queen Castle, hopefully safe behind a moat of cameras and the foolishness that passed for network TV these days.

    Molina returned to her Toyota, parked far enough from the crime scene to preserve evidence. Something about the crime scene bothered her but she couldn’t say just what. Someone caught up with her.
    “What’s going on?” A voice behind her.
    She turned. “Larry. What’re you doing here?”
    “Heard the buzz. Now that I’m off undercover, I can’t sleep nights. Did too much action then. So I listen to what’s going down on the police channels. Looks like a tragedy.” He nodded back toward the fallen girl.
    “Sixteen? Yeah, a tragedy.”
    He scanned the mall’s hulking profile, haloed by the city’s constant aurora of artificial light. “The most innocent public places are where the dirtiest deals go down. Malls. Hotel parking lots. No safe place anymore.”
    “Not news.”
    “You’ve got a kid. Is she too young for malls by herself?”
    “Young,” she conceded, recalling the recent madcap shopping expedition with the trace of a smile. “And not ‘young’ enough for my taste.”
    “That’s why you care. That’s why you came out personally.”
    Molina shook her head, leaned against her car’s front fender. “No. That wouldn’t keep me up nights. It’s a case, that’s all.”
    “Are you sure it isn’t personal?”
    “Anyone killed on my watch is personal.”
    “That’s a lot of responsibility, Lieutenant.”
    “Goes with the job title.”
    He leaned against the car beside her. He’d be sorry. She recalled that it was dusty. Who had time to visit a car wash? Multitasking.
    “I, ah, lost that sense of being personally responsible,” he said. “I miss it. I was responsible for living up to my false identity. Period. It took all my energy and all my cunning.”
    “Cunning. I think of that as a criminal attribute.”
    “Right. I needed criminal attributes.”
    “Must be hard to drop.”
    “The hours are. Let me follow you home, make sure you get there.”
    “Are you kidding? I can’t drive this

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