Rebecca Temple Mysteries 3-Book Bundle. Sylvia Maultash Warsh

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Rebecca Temple Mysteries 3-Book Bundle - Sylvia Maultash Warsh страница 34

Rebecca Temple Mysteries 3-Book Bundle - Sylvia Maultash Warsh A Rebecca Temple Mystery

Скачать книгу

the rush, but she had to move — the van door was opening. Someone was getting out. “No!” she screamed, and punched her gearshift into reverse. Craning her neck to see out the rear window, she pumped her foot to the floor, then screeched backwards off the sidewalk. She flew in reverse for a block till she could turn around in a driveway and race back toward Spadina. Her heart knocked in her chest. Stupid, stupid! If she got away, she would never be this stupid again.

      chapter twenty-three

      Rebecca jammed her foot on the gas and watched the asphalt speed up beneath her as she raced up Spadina. The street was empty but she couldn’t take her eyes off the rear-view mirror. Where was he? Had she really lost him? Her eyes were engaged in the mirror when she felt the thud of her tires against the curb. She swung the wheel wide and veered into the oncoming lane. Take it easy. You don’t want to wrap yourself around a pole and do his job for him.

      She was fast approaching Eglinton Avenue. Up ahead, the traffic light was red. There was no one behind her that she could see, but she wasn’t about to stop. Maybe he’d taken a different way. Maybe he’d camouflaged his van somehow; maybe he was a magician. Slowing down, she checked both sides of Eglinton for cars. There was one coming toward her in the distance but she could make it. She floored it and shrieked into a left turn, heading west.

      The light at Bathurst was unavoidable. There was always traffic at that intersection. While sitting impatiently at the red, she kept her eyes on the rearview mirror. No high beams. No vans. He’d given up. For now.

      She pulled her car into the nearly empty parking lot of Thirteen Division for the second time in two days. Looking frantically over each shoulder, she hurried into the building.

      At the front counter, the same desk sergeant greeted her. “May I help you?”

      “Someone just tried to kill me!” she said, trying to control her voice. She was out of breath as if she’d run all the way.

      “Calm down, ma’am,” said the sergeant, coming out from behind. “Are you hurt?”

      “I’m not injured,” she said, realizing she had been lucky.

      “Have a seat, ma’am, and I’ll get a constable.”

      “I’ve got to see Detective Wanless. Is he still here?”

      The man craned his neck behind him. “He’s working late on a case, but I’ll get one of the other men.”

      “This is about the case he’s working on.” She hadn’t sat down and she wasn’t going to.

      “The Morelli murder?” he asked.

      So Wanless had other fish to fry. She had a sinking feeling about Goldie’s case but kept her face determined. The sergeant hesitated, then made for the back corner of the station.

      In the distance she could see Detective Wanless pulling on his sports jacket while he strolled toward her.

      “What can I do for you, Doctor?” he said, his bullet head tilted and waiting.

      “He tried it again, he tried to kill me,” she said. “I just barely got away.”

      “Take it easy,” he said. “You’re all right now.”

      Rebecca was taken aback at the soothing tone of his words, words she had murmured herself often enough to patients. It felt odd being on the receiving end but she was surprisingly grateful for his sympathy and followed him back to his office in the corner.

      His desk was awash in clutter, paper piled in organized clumps. Wanted posters decorated his walls. It wasn’t until she sat down that she realized her knees were shaking.

      “Who tried to kill you?” he asked.

      “It was Goldie’s killer. He must’ve followed me all the way from the club. It was a van. Dark blue, I think. It was hard to see because of the headlights. He was very clever, hanging back at first. Then when I turned down a side road and he followed, I knew. He pulled in front of me. I heard his door open. He was going to drag me out of my car....” She took a breath to calm herself, knowing she hadn’t explained it well.

      Wanless was taking notes behind his desk. “So how did you get away?” His voice was too even.

      “I backed up as fast as the car would go. Then I turned and gunned it out of there.”

      “What did he look like?”

      Was Wanless trying to be obtuse? “I couldn’t see him,” she said. “He was driving behind me with his headlights shining in my eyes.”

      “What about when he stopped?”

      “I wasn’t going to hang around to see who it was! I just got out of there fast.” She paused, uncertain. “There’s a man I’ve seen a few times. He watches me from a distance. Strange-looking man in a sweatsuit and baseball cap. Couldn’t see his face, but it could’ve been him in the van.”

      “Height?” Wanless asked. “Weight? Hair colour?”

      “I don’t know. Slim, I’d say. Average height. I couldn’t see his hair.”

      “What about the car? Did he hit your car at all?”

      She thought a moment. “He swung over at me, but I pulled onto the sidewalk.”

      One of his eyebrows went up but he kept writing in the notebook, his skepticism an aura around his face.

      “You say you were at a club.” He glanced up from the desk and perused her skirt and modest heels. “Which club?”

      “El Dorado,” she muttered, suddenly embarrassed.

      His face clouded over. “The one on College Street?” She nodded, but said nothing. “Doesn’t seem to be your style, Doctor. I would’ve thought something more upscale, maybe one of the ones near Eglinton and Yonge.”

      He would get it out of her sooner or later. “I went there to speak to someone who knew Goldie Kochinsky.”

      “And you did that because...?”

      “I wanted to clear something up.” She ignored the blank stare that said, “I’m too busy for this crap,” and went on.

      “The man who runs the club — Capitán Diaz — is from Argentina. What if he had something to do with her torture there? What if he had orders to finish the job here?”

      “Do you have any evidence?”

      She blinked and turned away.

      “If I followed every ‘what if in a case, Doctor, I’d need to bring my sleeping bag to the office and my wife would divorce me. Look, we’re professionals. Let us do our job.”

      “Why don’t you admit it, Detective. You’re already working on a different case. This is obviously more important to me than it is to you.”

      He sat back in his chair and absently brushed his palm against the side of his head. “All murder cases are important. Some are just more straightforward than

Скачать книгу