Just Desserts (33 page)

Read Just Desserts Online

Authors: G. A. McKevett

“I didn’t actually do anything with that Max guy. I just let him take a couple of pictures of me, but I didn’t really show anything. And when he tried to... you know... I told him no.”

“I’m proud,” she replied with a smile. Then the smile faded. “Why did you let me think otherwise?”

“I just wanted to irk you.”

“And a damned good job you did of it, too.”

They both laughed and looked again at the line that was down to three.

“Go.” Savannah gave her a gentle push. “Call me when you get there.”

“Even if it’s three in the morning?”

“All right, even if it’s three. Take care of yourself, baby.”

“You, too.”

As Savannah turned to walk away, she was surprised at how much she missed the kid already.

Damn. Alone again.

 

But then again, maybe not.

Savannah stood in the moonlight in her front yard with Dirk, Ryan, Gibson, and Tammy, beneath the magnolia tree, which was in full bloom.

“Exactly what is it we’re supposed to do?” Dirk asked with a bit of a growl in his voice.

“This is a very old and very sacred ritual,” she whispered, looking up into the tree with its ivory blossoms glowing in the silver light of the full moon. “We take these wishes, which we’ve written on bits of paper, and tie them to the tree, like this....” She demonstrated with her own. “We give our heart’s desires to the tree, and later, when our wishes have all come true, we return and thank the tree.”

Ryan, Gibson, and Tammy nodded reverently, thoroughly into the spirit of the event.

“We thank a tree?” Dirk asked, less spiritually inclined.

“Yes. Shut up and do it,” she hissed at him.

Each carefully tied their own wishes to a branch, briefly closed their eyes, and sent their desires into the tree, into the night, into the light of the full moon.

“Does anybody else feel stupid?” Dirk asked.

“It doesn’t matter,” Savannah told him in a too-sweet, condescending tone. “It’ll work, even if you’re stupid. Granny Reid says so.”

“What do you think we should call this new agency that we’re forming here tonight?” Ryan asked, gazing up at the moon overhead.

“I’ve got it,” Tammy said, inspired. “How about Moonlight Magnolias?”

Moonlight Magnolias.

Savannah looked at the circle of her new friends and one old, tried and true.

“Sounds good to me,” she said. “Sounds very, very good.”

 

Plus-sized P.I. Savannah Reid gets a taste of the high life when she attends a Hollywood premiere on the arm of husband Dirk Coulter. Savannah may be a newlywed, but even she gets weak in the knees when she meets celebrity athlete-turned-movie-star Jason Tyrone. So imagine how she feels when the star’s rock-hard body is found rock-hard dead...

 

Some guys have everything. With his stunning looks and dazzling charm, former heavyweight champ Jason Tyrone is America’s favorite new action hero. Make that was. Once so spectacular in action, the blockbuster idol was found dead in his hotel room after his latest premiere. Despite his chiseled physique, Jason is never getting up again...

 

Though the autopsy reveals Jason may have gotten his killer body through doping, no one wants to believe the beloved athlete is a fraud, least of all Savannah. Soon she’s deeply immersed in the dark world of body enhancing drugs, and wondering if the world-class gym where Jason worked out is really just a front for a lucrative drug ring. Was Jason’s death the price he paid for threatening to expose other celebrities caught in the clutch of keeping a flawless image? Or was everyone’s favorite hero a victim of his own desire to always be at the top of his game? No stranger to society’s obsession with image, Savannah is determined to get to the truth. And for the voluptuous investigator, this time it’s personal....

 

Please turn the page for an exciting sneak peek of
G.A. McKevett’s next Savannah Reid mystery
KILLER PHYSIQUE
coming in April 2014!

 

Chapter One

Standing at her bathroom sink, staring at the disgruntled, newly-married woman in the mirror, Savannah Reid rehearsed the speech she intended to give the jury at her murder trial. It would be during the sentencing phase, no doubt, because she fully intended to plead “Guilty.”

She was certain that if there was even one semi-persnickety female on the jury, she’d escape the needle.

“You have to understand, ladies and gentlemen, that I spent three and a half long weeks redecorating that bathroom — all in anticipation of his parents’ visit. I’m pretty sure I messed up my back permanently by hanging those fancy ceiling tiles... the ones that used to be white, but are now all globbed up with dribs and drabs of blue shaving foam. How in heaven’s name does a grown man get shaving foam on the ceiling?”

She glanced around at the carnage of her freshly-renovated bathroom and added in her thick, Georgia drawl, “I reckon the same way he got it all over the sink, the faucet handle, the light switch, and the mirror. My dear jury members, you haven’t lived ‘til you’ve tried to scrub that stuff off a mirror. It’s blue cement. You can take a razor blade and fingernail polish remover to it, and it won’t budge.”

A brisk knock on the door interrupted her plea for mercy.

“You in there?” inquired a deep, annoyed, male voice.

“Yeah,” she barked back.

“You comin’ out soon? Or am I gonna have to go downstairs again to do my business?”

She jerked the door open and stood, nose-to-nose, with her beloved new husband — give or take a few inches. “Boy, you and your thimble-sized bladder are irritatin’ the daylights outta me.”

He shrugged and grinned down at her with a sexy smirk that would have set her bloomers atwitter, were it not for the devastation behind her.

“Hey,” he said, “when the dragon needs drainin’, what’s a guy to do?”

He waited, giving her plenty of time to chuckle, or at least grin. But all he got was an icy blue stare. It was the glacial glare that had made former cop, now private detective, Savannah Reid, infamous among suspected murderers, robbers, embezzlers, and jaywalkers. Evildoers of all shapes and sizes, including husbands who left the toilet seat up and burped loudly in fancy restaurants, had been on the receiving end of those cobalt lasers.

Rolling his eyes, Dirk moaned and said, “Oh, man. I’m always in trouble. What did I do
this
time?”

Stepping to one side, so that he would have a clear, unobstructed view of the crime scene, she waved an arm to indicate the extent of the damages. “That,” she said. “That’s what you did. Again.”

He gave the room a cursory glance and frowned, obviously confused. “What? What’s the matter? Did I fold the towel in half instead of perfect thirds? Did I leave the cap off the toothpaste? Am I gonna get shot at sunrise or hanged from the neck until dead?”

She decided not to tell him that she had, indeed, been fantasizing about an execution only moments before. Her own. Society’s recompense for premeditated, first degree homicide.

As she watched his eyes dart around the room, registering absolutely nothing amiss, by his own lax non-standards, her ire rose. “Does this room look neat and tidy to you?” she asked.

“I’ve seen worse,” he replied.

“Yes, I’m sure you have. But not in
my
house. Look at those toothpaste spit specks all over the mirror.”

“Hey, happens when I floss. You don’t want a husband with lousy dental hygiene, do you?”

“And why did you leave your deodorant, shave cream can, and jock itch powder there on the sink again? I asked you to put them back in the medicine cabinet when you’re done with them.”

He looked genuinely perplexed. “But why should I go to all that work when tomorrow I’m just gonna have to drag ‘em out so’s I can use ‘em again?”

“AI-I-I that work? Dra-a-ag ‘em out? You act like I’m asking you to pick a bale o’ cotton in the hot, Georgia sun.”

He gave her a sappy, condescending smile that was, no doubt, intended to smooth her ruffled feathers, but in fact, accomplished exactly the opposite. “If I put those three tiny little things away,” he said, “will that make my beautiful, new bride happy?”

“I reckon,” she grumbled. “And maybe you could wipe off the mirror once in a month of Sundays, since it’s you who gunks it all up four times a day.”

Sighing deeply, he trudged past her into the room, picked up his offending toiletries and with great ceremony, placed them in the medicine chest. He fussed with the containers for what seemed like forever to Savannah, making quite a show of spacing them perfectly, evenly, among their neighbors, turning the labels straight outward, then readjusting ad nauseum.

With that delicate mission accomplished, he strode to the toilet, unrolled a giant handful of tissue, and returned to the sink. Still grinning like a goat munching sand burrs, he flipped on the sink faucet and wetted the paper.

As Savannah’s blood pressure soared, he calmly, casually, smeared the sodden wad all over the mirror, leaving bits of soggy mess behind. Unfortunately, the blue blobs of shaving cream remained undisturbed.

Standing behind him, her face turning redder by the moment, Savannah looked around the room for potential murder weapons and wondered if it were possible to inflict a fatal wound with a Lady Gillette aloe-moisturizing bikini line shaver.

“There,” he exclaimed, proudly displaying his handiwork. “Happy now?”

“Plum ecstatic,” she muttered.

“Good. And now that I’m in here, I’m gonna choke the chicken. So, unless you’ve got some picky-ass directions about how I oughta do that, too, you might manna skedaddle.”

With her chin a few notches higher than usual, a grim look on her face, Savannah marched stiffly to the door. She paused there for a moment as a hundred or so of Granny Reid’s admonitions about “living in harmony with the man the good God gave ya” and “overlookin’ the better part of a husband’s transgressions bein’ the path to domestic tranquility” danced through her head.

She could take the high road and just walk out without saying another word. That would be noble, virtuous.

Blessed are the peacemakers, and all that good stuff.

Dirk was, after all, a decent man. He loved her. He’d put his crap away with a smile — okay, a smirk —on his face and kinda, sorta cleaned up when she’d asked him to. What more could a woman ask, really?

Yes, she would put away her anger and choose the path of peace.

Virtue, after all, had its own reward... mostly in the form of self-righteous gloating.

Then she heard a sound behind her that made every muscle in her body kink into a knot. A merry little tinkling sound.

Not the sound of liquid hitting water. Oh, no. It was the unmistakable merry little melody of pee hitting tile.

She whirled on him with a vengeance. “Dammit all, Dirk! At the shooting range, you score 49 out of 50 shots from 25 yards—standing, kneeling and prone! But you can’t hit a dadgum toilet that’s two feet away?”

He stood – chicken partially choked, dragon half drained – a look of shock and confusion on his face. “What?”

“If I were to paint a bull’s-eye on the bottom of the bowl, do you reckon it’d improve that piss-poor aim of yours?”

He thought about it. Long and hard. Then, having given it all due consideration, he solemnly nodded, smiled and said, “It could. Yes, I think it might at that. Good idea, babe. You get on that right away.”

“You...! You...! I oughta...! A-a-u-u-gh!”

She stomped out of the room and slammed the door behind her, rocking the house to its foundation.

As she strode down the hallway, she could hear her groom laughing his butt off on the other side of the bathroom door.

Yeah, well, at least somebody’s enjoying all this wedded bliss,
she thought.

“Laugh it up, Fuzzball,” she muttered as she went into the bedroom to get dressed for their big night out. “I’ll getcha back. One way or the other.”

Granny Reid had told her many times, “Don’t let the sun set on your wrath, Savannah girl. No matter how bad the squabblin’s been that day, come nighttime you always make it right ‘tween you and your man before you lay your head on your pillow to sleep.”

Savannah had no problem with that sage advice. It would be at least seven hours or more before they retired for the evening. Surely, she could arrange some soul-gratifying form of revenge before then.

Nope, she had no intention of going to bed angry. Come nighttime, she intended to be giggling on that pillow and rubbing her hands with glee.

 

Chapter Two

As Savannah rode down the Ventura Highway in the rear seat of the beautiful old Bentley – on her way to a major Hollywood movie premiere, dressed to the nines in her best, sapphire silk dress – she couldn’t help thinking about that tiny, rural town where she had grown up.

McGill, Georgia was, and remained, little more than a wide spot in a rough, pothole-ridden road.

Thanks to Granny Reid, who’d raised Savannah and her eight siblings, Savannah had many pleasant childhood memories. But she had even more grim ones from the days before Granny had taken custody of her grandchildren. And at times like this, when her life was full to overflowing with the abundant blessings of basic needs fulfilled, loving friends, and the occasional adventure, like this one, she thought about the child she had been in McGill.

Sometimes she enjoyed the irrational, but healing, fantasy of the adult Savannah returning to yesteryear, scooping up the ragged little girl she had been, setting her on her lap, and telling the child, “Things are gonna get a whole lot better, darlin’, when you grow up. You just hang in there and it’ll happen, sooner than you think. You’re just a little caterpillar now. But when you grow up, you’re gonna be a big, beautiful butterfly.”

It would have helped, she had no doubt. Because if anybody in the world could benefit from a crystal ball that showed a sparkling future, it was a poor kid from McGill, Georgia, struggling to make it through a tough childhood in a dark place with limited hope.

As Dirk reached over, took her hand, folded it between his large, warm ones, and squeezed, her earlier irritations toward him melted away. She gave him a sideways glance, then a wink, and a grin that deepened her dimples. She had to admit he looked darn good in a tux. The end results were almost worth the trouble of having to hogtie him first to get him into it.

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