One False Move

One False Move by Alex Kava Read Free Book Online

Book: One False Move by Alex Kava Read Free Book Online
Authors: Alex Kava
Tags: Fiction, Suspense, Crime
along with those irresistible freckles and that boyish grin allowed him to get away with just about anything. Now if only someone could teach him how to dress. She certainly had not succeeded, because here he was wearing those baggy jeans she wished he would throw out and the black T-shirt that read, What if the hokeypokey is really what it’s all about?
    Melanie hadn’t even noticed that he had something tucked under his arm until he got to their table. She might not have noticed it at all except that Charlie stood it in front of them on the table, grinning from ear to ear.
    “Here you go,” Charlie said, presenting the object to Jared as if he were Indiana Jones delivering some gold treasure he had seized by outrunning violent tribesmen and Nazi henchmen. “You said you needed one more. Whadya do with the one I gave you yesterday?”
    Melanie couldn’t believe it. Was this the important errand Jared had sent Charlie on? What the hell were the two of them up to? Was it Jared’s way of testing Charlie’s loyalty? What stupid, immature game were they playing? Because why else would Jared encourage her son’s obsession with stealing ugly ceramic gnomes from people’s front yards?
     
CHAPTER 8
     
    10:24 a.m.

Logan Hotel
     
    Max Kramer stopped to catch his breath at the fourth-floor landing of the Logan. Sweat poured down his forehead, dripping off his chin. The son-of-a-bitching apartment building had no air-conditioning. What did he expect of a place that had a security door held open with a trash can? The elevator didn’t work. No surprise. And if that wasn’t enough, Carrie Ann Comstock lived on the sixth floor.
    He took off his suit jacket, threw it over his arm and loosened his tie. He had just put on the crisply pressed suit and already it felt like a wrinkled wet rag. He swatted at a swarm of flies that had followed him in from the street. Maybe he was getting too old to be meeting clients at their houses. He pulled himself up the narrow flight of stairs and stopped again. This time he took a deep breath and almost started gagging.
    “Good God!”
    Someone on the fifth floor had burned their breakfast. It smelled like scorched milk mixed with something sour, something that reminded him of vomit. He held his breath and hurried up the last flight, pushing through the filthy, heavy door and letting it slam behind him.
    He tried wiping the sweat from his face with the sleeve of his shirt and slapped at the persistent flies. He hated feeling damp and sticky, unclean. He prided himself in looking pressed and polished. He kept remembering how good he looked on those videotapes he had made of his recent interviews. Thanks to Jared Barnett he had a whole library of videotapes.
    He buttoned his collar and straightened his tie. He took one more swat at the flies then knocked on the door of apartment 615. The number six clung by a loose nail and had swung upside down so that it looked like apartment 915.
    A grumble came from the other side of the door. He stepped back and waited for the succession of clicks as the locks were undone. The door opened a couple of inches, limited by the chain that held it. Max wanted to shake his head and restrained himself from rolling his eyes. In this building a door chain was about as worthless as a flyswatter.
    “Whadya want?”
    Max recognized the woman’s raspy voice and knew that it was, no doubt, the result of her prolonged usage of crack cocaine, not cigarettes.
    “I’m Max Kramer. Are you Carrie Ann Comstock?”
    “Yeah, so whadya want?”
    “Actually, Carrie Ann, you called me.”
    “I did?” She shoved one eye to the crack and gave him a once-over.
    “You said your friend Heather Fischer recommended me to represent you.”
    “She did?”
    “I just spoke to you on the phone last week. I told you I’d stop by on Wednesday. Today’s Wednesday.”
    “Oh, right. You’re the lawyer guy. Geez! Where’s my fuckin’ brain today?” She slammed the door. He heard the

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