Tampered

Read Online Tampered by Ross Pennie - Free Book Online Page B

Book: Tampered by Ross Pennie Read Free Book Online
Authors: Ross Pennie
Tags: Fiction, Medical Mystery
Ads: Link
untouched full-course meals. On the other hand, you’ve got savvy entrepreneurs, like Gus and Gloria, feeding fixed-income seniors with poor eyesight and fading taste buds.”
    “Dr. Wakefield,” said Natasha. She was hiding her smirk with her coffee cup, but her eyes revealed her unrestrained amusement at Hamish’s theory. “You think Gus and Gloria are Dumpster diving? And bringing the stuff back to Camelot?”
    “That’s what freegans do. It’s part of their manifesto. They refuse to shop in grocery stores because they’re owned by hard-hearted, wasteful capitalists. Instead, they pull freshly discarded food out of Dumpsters and take it home. Claim they’re saving money and the planet at the same time.”
    Zol looked at Colleen, who was covering her mouth with her serviette. He bit his lip. The last time Hamish approached him with a wildly eccentric theory, Zol had laughed it off, and Hamish stormed off in a major pout — stayed incommunicado for a week. It turned out that Hamish had been exactly on track and Zol had to eat his words. The guy had amazing instincts.
    Zol stared at the foam on his latte. He remembered the large, unlabelled plastic bags of jumbled vegetables that Natasha had hauled out of Camelot’s deep-freeze. He had to admit, those veggies could have come from a Dumpster. Who was to know? Suddenly, his coffee tasted cold and bitter. “Well,” he said, breaking the silence around the table. “How do we investigate the possibility that the Oliveiras may have embraced the . . . the freegan movement?”
    Colleen put down her serviette and nestled her cup onto its saucer. There was no hint of a smirk on her lips, just professional concern. “Sounds like this comes under my scope of practice. Who procures most of the food for the Lodge? The husband or the wife?”
    “The husband,” Zol said. “Gus does the actual shopping, though I imagine Gloria tells him exactly what to buy.”
    “Perfect,” Colleen said. Zol loved the way her South African voice made the word come out like a purr:
purrr-fect.
She returned his smile. “I’ll put a tail on our friend Gus.”
    He felt guilty that Colleen was being sent out on a fool’s errand, but if that’s what it took to keep Hamish in the game, so be it.

CHAPTER 8
    At eight o’clock the next morning, Hamish felt an easing of the knot across his shoulders. No matter what, and especially on a Friday the thirteenth, a car wash was the perfect place to hide and meditate. Impenetrable to pagers and mobile phones, it provided a haven from an intrusive world. This was one of those automated jobs that left a lot of spots and was done in only a couple of minutes. Sadly, his regular, full-service place on Main Street West was on strike. It did a much better job and, more importantly, its twenty-minute cycle gave him plenty of time to practise his breathing exercises. During a stressful week, he’d visit the car wash half a dozen times. He hated the idea of mud spatters on the Saab’s side panels, and going more than a day without his breathing exercises caused his anxiety to build almost to breaking point. He had no truck with all the yoga mumbo-jumbo that went with Pranayama breathing, but the exercises did put a rein on his galloping pulse and helped organize the thoughts that so often raced across his mind.
    At the end of the cycle, he put the Saab into gear and eased through the car wash’s narrow exit. He wasn’t ready to face a long morning in his laboratory, verifying his research assistant’s latest calculations. He parked at the curb, put on the CD of car-wash sound effects he’d downloaded from the Internet, and let the soothing vibrations sweep over him while he finished his breathing.
    He hadn’t missed the smirks last evening at the Nitty Gritty. Zol, Natasha, and Colleen had tried to hide behind their coffee cups, but he knew what they were thinking. They hadn’t believed a word he’d said about the freegans. They were just humouring

Similar Books

The Promise

Lesley Pearse

Gene Mapper

Taiyo Fujii

Contrary Pleasure

John D. MacDonald

The Crooked Beat

Nick Quantrill

The Fight for Us

Elizabeth Finn

Cave of Secrets

Morgan Llywelyn

Dead End Job

Ingrid Reinke

Uprising

Shelly Crane