Blood Hunt

Read Online Blood Hunt by Lee Killough - Free Book Online Page A

Book: Blood Hunt by Lee Killough Read Free Book Online
Authors: Lee Killough
Ads: Link
him from under the sunshade of her hand, then stepped back. “Come in.”
    Moving with the heaviness of someone fighting a body reluctant to wake up, she led the way to the living room. Dark drapes left the room in artificial night. She switched on one lamp and waved him into its pool of light. She herself, however, sat in a chair beyond it, in shadow. A deliberate maneuver on her part?
    “ This couldn’t wait until I got to the club?” Irritation leaked through the careful modulation of her voice.
    “ I’ll be off duty by that time. I try not to work nights if I can help it; the police budget can’t stand too much overtime.”
    “ I see. Well, then, ask away, Inspector.”
    With her face only a pale blur, Garreth found himself listening closely to her voice, to read her through it...and discovered with surprise that she did not sound like he felt she should. Inexplicably, the voice discorded with the rest of her.
    “ Can you remember what you and Mossman talked about Tuesday night?”
    She paused before answering. “Not really. We flirted and made small talk. I’m afraid I paid little attention to most of it even while we were talking. Surely it isn’t important.”
    “ We’re hoping that something he said can give us a clue to where he went after leaving the Barbary Now. Did he happen to mention any friends in the city?”
    “ He was far too busy arguing why we should become friends.”
    Suddenly Garreth realized why her voice seemed at odds with the rest of her. She did not talk like someone in her twenties. Where was the slang everyone else used? Just listening to her, she sounded more like his mother. What was that she had called him at the door? A mick. Who called Irishmen micks these days?
    Garreth looked around, trying to learn more about her from the apartment, but could see little beyond the circle of lamplight. The illumination reached only to a Danish-style couch which matched his chair and a small desk with a letter lying on it.
    He said, “Did he tell you he was married?”
    “ He wore a wedding ring.”
    “ Of course.” Garreth stood up and moved toward the door. “Well, it was a slim chance he’d say anything useful, I suppose. I’m sorry to have bothered you.” On the way, he detoured by the desk to read the address on the letter. Knowing someone she wrote to might be useful.
    “ It’s a price I pay for my unusual working hours.” She stood and crossed to the lamp. “I’m sorry I couldn’t help.”
    Garreth had just time enough to read the ornately written address before the light went out, leaving the room in darkness.
    On the steps outside, after her door closed behind him, he reread the address in memory. The letter had to be incoming; it had this address. However, it had been addressed not to Lane Barber, but to Madelaine Bieber. The similarity of the two names struck him. Lane Barber could well be a stage name, “prettied up” from Madelaine Bieber.
    He eyed the garage under the house as he came down the steps to the sidewalk. Did she drive or did she not?
    He tried the door. Locked. However, by shining a flashlight from his car through the windows, he made out the shape of a car inside and illuminated the license plate. He wrote down the number.
    Motion above him brought his attention up in time to see the drape fall back into place in the window over the garage. Lane, of course, watching him, but...out of curiosity or fear? Maybe the license number would provide an answer to that.
    Back at the Hall, he ran Madelaine Bieber’s name through Records and asked for a registration check on the license number.
    “ The car is registered to an Alexandra Pfeifer,” the clerk told him. The address was Lane’s.
    “ Give me a license check on that name.”
    The picture from DMV in Sacramento looked exactly like Lane Barber. Miss Pfeifer was described as five ten, 130 pounds, red hair, green eyes, born July 10, 1956. Which would make her twenty-seven.
    Then Records came back with a

Similar Books

Mortal Causes

Ian Rankin

Promised

Caragh M. O'brien

You Got Me

Mercy Amare