the Forgotten Man (2005)

Read Online the Forgotten Man (2005) by Crais Robert - Free Book Online

Book: the Forgotten Man (2005) by Crais Robert Read Free Book Online
Authors: Crais Robert
Ads: Link
computer and punched in the room number to bring up the invoice.
    "That's Mr. Faustina - Herbert Faustina."
    He spelled it for me.
    "Could you give me his home address and phone?"
    He read off an address on College Ridge Lane in Scottsdale, Arizona, then followed it with a phone number.
    "Okay. How about his credit card number?"
    "He paid cash. We do that if you put down a three-hundred-dollar cash deposit."
    I tapped my pad, trying to figure out what to ask next while he stared at me. You should never give them a chance to think.
    He said, "What did you say your name was?"
    "Cole."
    "Could I see your badge?"
    "If he made calls from his room, those calls would show up on his bill, right?"
    He was beginning to look nervous.
    "Are you a policeman?"
    "No, I'm a private investigator. It's okay, Mr. Kramer. We're all on the same side here."
    Kramer stepped back from the desk to put more distance between us. He didn't look scared; he was worried he would get in trouble for answering my questions.
    "I don't think I should say any more. I'm going to call the manager."
    He turned to pick up his phone.
    "You need to do something before you call. Someone else might have been involved, and they might be in his room. That person might be injured and need help."
    He held the phone to his face, but he didn't dial. His eyebrows quivered, as if he was sorry he had ever taken a crappy job like this.
    "What do you mean?"
    "Check his room. Just peek inside to see if someone needs help, then you can call your manager. You don't want someone dying in that room."
    He glanced back toward the hall.
    "What do you mean, dying?"
    "Faustina was murdered. I knocked on his door before I came to you, but no one answered. I don't know that anyone is inside, but I'm asking you to check. Make sure no one is bleeding to death, then call."
    Kramer glanced toward the hall again, then opened the desk drawer for his passkey and came around the desk.
    "You wait here."
    "I'll wait."
    When he disappeared down the hall, I went behind the desk. Herbert Faustina's account still showed on the computer. I found the button labeled CHECKOUT INVOICE, and pressed it. A speedy little laser printer pushed out Herbert Faustina's final room charges on three pages. I took them, and left before Kramer came back. I did not wait. The World's Greatest Detective had struck again.

    Chapter 10
    T en hours start to finish, and I had Faustina's name and address, and a list of every call made from his motel. I was thinking about calling Diaz and Pardy when I realized I was hungry, so I picked up a couple of soft tacos from Henry's Tacos in North Hollywood and ate them on the benches out front. I wolfed down the tacos like a starving dog, then bought two more, slathering them with Henry's amazing sauce. I would probably have Faustina's life story by dinner, and his killer by bedtime. LAPD would probably beg me to clear their other unsolved cases, and I thought I might go along. Largesse is everything. When I finished eating, I worked my way up Laurel Canyon to the top of the mountain, then along Woodrow Wilson Drive toward my house. I was feeling pretty good until I saw the unmarked sedan parked in front of my house, and my front door wide open.
    I parked off the road beyond my house, then walked back to check out the car. It was an LAPD detective ride with a radio in the open glove box and a man's sport coat tossed casually on the back seat. My friend Lou Poitras was a homicide lieutenant at Hollywood Station, but this wasn't his car. Also, Lou wouldn't leave my front door hanging open like an invitation to bugs and looters.
    I went inside. Pardy was on my couch with his arms spread along its back and his feet up on the coffee table. He didn't get up or smile when he saw me. A black Sig hung free under his arm.
    "You have a nice little place here, Cole. I guess it pays off, getting your name in the papers."
    "What are you doing?"
    "I was up here asking your neighbors about you. They say your

Similar Books

Folding Hearts

Jennifer Foor

Torrid Nights

Lindsay McKenna

SevenintheSky

Viola Grace

Fields of Rot

Jesse Dedman

Almost Home

Jessica Blank

Waves in the Wind

Wade McMahan

Through The Pieces

Bobbi Jo Bentz