Read Dangerous Relations Online
Authors: Carolyn Keene
R
ICHARD
S
MITH
is a pretty common name,” said George, guessing Nancy's thought.
“It could be a coincidence,” Nancy agreed. “But I'm betting it's not.”
“What? What are you talking about?” asked Vera, looking alarmed.
Nancy turned back to her. “Do you know the man from Sunshine Enterprises? He's been here checking on the circus trucks. He was at the party last night,” Nancy added, seeing Vera's puzzled frown. “Gray eyes, dark hair.”
“Great tan,” added Bess. “He was wearing a pink shirt.”
“Oh, him. I remember seeing him, but no, I don't know him,” said Vera.
“His name is Richard Smith,” said Nancy. Realizing Vera might not be aware of it, she
added, “Dickie is a nickname for Richard. And he would be the right age. I thought he was in his late twenties, but he could be thirty or thirty-one.”
Vera looked so alarmed that Nancy hastened to calm her. “There might not be any connection. But if there is, I promise you, we'll find out.”
“Go, then. Do what you need to do. Just don't let any harm come to Natalia!” Vera cried.
The girls left Vera's trailer and found a mechanic beneath one of the circus trucks. Nancy asked if Richard was around. The man said he was in Saint Petersburg at the company office and gave her directions.
As she and her friends sped toward Saint Petersburg, about fifty miles away, Nancy said, “I got the impression Richard worked in the business with his father.”
“This is going to be a snap,” Bess said. “We'll just walk in and ask to see Victor Bykov.”
“We could. But if Richard is behind these attacks, we don't want to tip him off. We've got to get solid evidence against him,” Nancy said. “First I'll see if the stem on his watch is missing. If it is, then we can be reasonably sure we've got our man. Then we'll lay a trap.”
“And if it isn't?” asked George, who was riding in the front seat beside Nancy.
“I'll find out if he's Bykov's son. That shouldn't be hardâjust look for a doorplate or letterhead with Victor's name on it. As for Richard,
I'll tell him we're checking out Keiser's alibi and we need directions to World of Sound. If he's the wrong man, no harm done. But if he's the culprit, he'll think his attempts to set up Keiser are working, and maybe he'll get careless.”
“But if it is Richard, how does he know who Natalia is? And why does he want to kill her?” asked Bess from the back.
“I don't know how or even
if
he knows. As for why, the only thing I see is that he had such strong feelings against Irina, he probably turned her in and foiled her plans to defect,” said Nancy. Hands tensing on the wheel, she added, “There are a lot of unanswered questions.”
The city limits gave way to sandy clay lowlands where gulls soared, searching for a meal.
“It's odd that Richard came to the circus parties. The account is already his, so it wasn't business,” Nancy mused as she drove. “And he clearly wasn't close friends with any of the circus people. He always seemed a little out of placeâunless I'm just trying to force pieces that really don't fit.”
As they crossed a bridge, all three girls looked down. Below, sailboats and cabin cruisers dotted the rippling waters. On the shore they saw several beautiful, snowy white egrets.
About an hour later, Nancy nosed the car onto the exit ramp for Saint Petersburg. Soon they were in the city, where the streets were clogged with tourists driving campers and pulling boats.
Nancy was thankful for George's help as she watched for street signs, but it was Bess who spotted Sunshine Enterprises' headquarters. Nancy drove through the gates. There was a large lot to one side of the building. She parked, and Bess started to climb out.
“Wait a second.” Nancy put a hand on her friend's arm. “You two better stay here. If Richard is our man and things get nasty, I'm going to need someone to get help.”
“How are we going to know if you need help?” Bess asked.
Nancy smiled, a little nervous. “If I don't show up in ten minutes, get help.”
The two girls agreed and got back into the car. Nancy continued across the lot and into the air-conditioned building.
There was a receptionist at the front desk. Nancy scanned the reception area. Just beyond the reception room she could see a corridor that split in two directions.
“May I help you?” the receptionist asked.
Nancy gave her name. “Is Richard Smith in?”
The woman picked up the phone. “Richard? There's a Miss Drew here to see you. Shall I send her in?”
Nancy waited as the woman listened, nodded, then hung up the phone. “He'll be right out.”
So he wasn't going to invite her into his office, thought Nancy. Hiding her disappointment, she smiled and said, “Thanks.”
As the young woman returned to her typing, Nancy edged closer to the desk. But the letterhead stationery in the typewriter had only a company logo, not the names of the officers. Hearing footsteps, Nancy stepped back just as Richard appeared in the corridor.
A smile lit his tanned face. “What a nice surprise! What brings you to Saint Petersburg?”
“Sleuthing,” Nancy said, adding in a conspiratorial whisper, “Marshall Keiser says he missed the party because he was shopping for sound equipment at World of Sound.”
“Oh, I see,” Richard said. “And was he?”
“I don't know yet,” Nancy replied, smiling. “I can't find the place. I thought maybe you'd give me directions.”
Richard looked puzzled. “You found me, but you couldn't find World of Sound? The road into town goes right past it.”
Big mistake! Nancy's mind raced for an alternate explanation. Smiling, she said, “I also found you because I was looking for you. I have something for you.” She opened her shoulder bag and looked for her coin purse.
Richard smiled curiously as she snapped open the pocket-size purse. “Big gifts come in small packages, they say,” he joked.
Nancy unwrapped the watch stem, then held it out to him. Watching him closely, she said, “It's not a gift, actually. It's a watch stem. Are you missing yours?”
“I don't think so,” said Richard. His eyes moved to his watch, and he slid his finger beneath the expandable band. He stretched it out, turning the stem so Nancy could see it. “See? My watch doesn't have a stem.”
The watchband settled against Richard's arm. A white line of skin as thin as a chalk mark outlined the band. That's not the same watch Richard was wearing yesterday! Nancy realized. The tan lines were wrong!
Goose bumps rose on her arm, but she flashed a smile, saying, “I thought maybe it caught in my sweater while we were dancing.”
His eyes pierced hers. “You danced with quite a few guys. Maybe it belongs to one of them.”
A shiver ran up Nancy's spine. Did he know what she was up to? It was impossible to tell.
The phone rang. The receptionist said, “Yes, one moment, please.” She covered the mouthpiece and said to Richard, “It's Vic on the car phone. Do you want to take it here or in your office?”
Nancy kept her face expressionless, but her pulse was racing as fast as her mind. Vic! The final piece of evidence she needed!
“I don't have the figures in front of me,” she heard Richard say. “Just a second while I get back to my office.” To Nancy he said, “I'm afraid you'll have to excuse me.”
“Of course,” she murmured absently.
“By the way,” he added, turning back, “if you'd like to do some shelling while you're in Florida, my invitation still stands.”
Shelling? With this would-be killer?
Nancy forced a big smile. “That sounds like fun. How about tomorrow?”
I
'VE ALWAYS HAD
good luck out on Siesta Key,” Richard said. “How about if we meet on the same stretch of beach where the party was? There'll be a low tide about five in the morning. As I told you, that's the best time to get shells.”
“Great,” Nancy said enthusiastically.
“Will Bess and George be coming, too?”
Nancy's laugh was convincing even to her own ears. “There's no way they're going to get up before dawn!”
Richard lifted his hand in a wave. “All right. Just the two of us. I'll see you then.”
Nancy returned his wave as she turned to go, but on the inside, she was boiling. He had destroyed Irina's life. He wasn't going to get away with destroying Natalia, too!
Nancy hurried out to the car and climbed in. “Well?” asked George.
“He's Victor's son, all right! He got a phone call while I was in there, and the receptionist referred to the caller as Vic.”
Bess gasped. “Then you've found Natalia's father!”
Grimly Nancy said, “I've also found Natalia's would-be killer.”
“So Richard was the attacker?” George asked.
“Can you prove it?” Bess asked, her eyes wide.
“I think so. He wasn't wearing the same watch he had on last night,” Nancy explained. “The band wasn't as wide. It didn't quite meet the tan line on his wrist.” Nancy raised a hand to stop Bess from interrupting. “Now, he could have just decided to wear a different watch today. But if that's the case, then why would he bother to deny that the stem I found could be his? I'll tell you why.” Nancy answered her own question. “He knew he lost the stem during the struggle with me. He must have felt it catch on my sweater or noticed it afterward. He thought if he claimed it, it would give him away.”
George asked, “But why would he want Natalia dead?”
Frowning, Nancy put the key in the ignition. “I don't know that yet. That's what's frustrating. But I've got a shelling date with him at daybreak tomorrow. I'll find out then.”
“A shelling date?” Bess shrieked. “You can't go off with him alone!”
“I don't like it either, Nan,” said George. “It's too dangerous.”
“Not if I get lots of backup.”
“Like who?” asked Bess.
“Marshall Keiser, for starters. Eduardo and Joseph. Hayden. And some clowns who were pretty heartsick over their joke turning sour,” Nancy said. She snapped on her seat belt and eased out of the lot.
“They'd be useful in a fight,” George agreed.
Nancy drove down the block and stopped near a small park where palm trees shaded dazzling orange and red hyacinths. An elderly couple in panama hats strolled past hand in hand. It gave her an idea.
“At five o'clock tomorrow morning, it will be low tide, and Richard's going to meet me on Siesta Key, the same place we had the party,” Nancy began. “I'll get him to walk down where the undergrowth has been left untrimmed. That'll provide good cover for the guys to hide. I'm going to get him to talk if I can. Once he has, I'll signal the guys to move in.”
“What's the signal?” asked George.
“I'll draw circles in the air with my flashlight,” Nancy said.
“Okay, sounds good,” George agreed, but Bess still looked worried.
A backup signal wouldn't hurt, thought Nancy,
keeping an eye on Sunshine Enterprises' parking lot half a block away. “I'll take a whistle, too. I'll give it a blast if I'm in trouble. Bess, you'll have to get it for me. And a hat, too. One that covers my face.”
Bess nodded, and Nancy explained, “I'm going to spend the rest of the day keeping an eye on Richard. Natalia's all alone at the hospital, and he may make another attempt.”
“What can I do to help?” George asked.
“I want you to go stay with her until Hayden returns. If I lose Richard, I'll call you immediately. Okay?”
George nodded as Bess asked, “What about me?”
“First, get me the hat and another rental car. Richard could easily spot this one. Then go to the circus and tell Keiser the plan. But don't tell him who we're setting up,” she added quickly.
“Shouldn't he know?” George asked.
“Not yet. Remember what he said this morning about settling his own scores? I don't want him trying that with Richard.”
“You're coming back to Sarasota tonight, aren't you?”
“Yes, but I'm going to make sure Richard's gone home for the night before I do,” said Nancy, determined he wasn't going to get another chance at Natalia.
“Okay, then. Let's get going,” said George.
Nancy climbed out of the car and waited on a
park bench. In twenty minutes, her friends were back in separate cars. Bess gave her a big straw hat, warned her to be careful, then climbed in with George and drove away, leaving Nancy a blue rental compact.
The day was long for Nancy. She moved the car several times, always keeping the exit of Sunshine Enterprises' parking lot in view. When Richard left at noon, she tailed him to a bayside restaurant, where he ate alone. After returning to Sunshine Enterprises, he didn't leave the building again until six o'clock.