In It For The Money
by David Burnsworth
on Tour September 11 - October 11, 2017
Synopsis:
Lowcountry Private Investigator Blu Carraway needs a new client. Heâs broke and the tax man is coming for his little slice of paradise. But not everyone appreciates his skills. Some call him a loose cannon. Others say heâs a liability. All the ex-Desert Storm Ranger knows is his phone hasnât rung in quite a while. Of course, that could be because it was cut off due to delinquent payments.
Lucky for him, a client does show up at his doorstepâa distraught mother with a wayward son. Sheâs rich and her boyâs in danger. Sounds like just the case for Blu. Except nothing about the case is as it seems. The jigsaw piecesâa ransom note, a beat-up minivan, dead strippers, and a missing briefcase filled with money and cocaineâdo not make a complete puzzle. The first real case for Blu Carraway Investigations in three years goes off the rails.
And thatâs the way he prefers it to be.
Book Details:
Genre: Mystery
Published by: Henery Press
Publication Date: September 12th 2017
Number of Pages: 278
ISBN: 9781635112436
Series:A Blu Carraway Mystery, #1
Purchase Links: Amazon ï | Barnes & Noble ï | Goodreads ï
Read an excerpt:
Chapter One
Lowcountry, South Carolina, early June, Thursday morningThe old rotary phone sitting on the desk refused to ring. No matter how much Blu Carraway wanted it to. He looked out the window of his makeshift office at the surrounding marsh and sighed. Crumpled up in his right hand was the latest tax assessment, in his left was an electronic cigarette. Without thinking, he took a hit off the vaporizer, which replaced Camels as his only vice. Well, that and pirated satellite TV.
And still the receiver remained silent.
One more good job.
It was all he needed.
Then Charleston County would be happy for another year, and heâd get to keep his little island home. Just. One. Good. Job.
The hula girl on his desk a Desert Storm buddy had given him when he first hung out his PI shingle bobbled at him as if to say, âHow long did you think you could keep this up, tough guy?â
He swatted her off the desk with the tax bill. âAt least another year, Dollie.â
As the plastic figure skittered across the old plank flooring, Blu heard the sound of tires on his crushed shell drive. With the sole air-conditioning being a ceiling fan and open windows, he heard everything happening on his little slice of paradise. But he suspected his tenure there was on borrowed time. The house and land, which had been in the family for next to forever, were his free and clear. Except nothing was free and clear. He still had his yearly rent payment to the county, which seemed to think nine acres of mostly sand and marsh with a small herd of free-roaming scraggly horses was worth one helluva lot. Even though they neglected to consider it relevant enough to route the mosquito sprayers anywhere near the place.
A black Mercedes, the new big one, sliced between two live oaks and rolled to a stop beside his ancient Land Cruiser. Blu watched as the driverâs door opened and a man in a suit and tie exited the car. Just as Blu was about to run outside to greet him, he noticed the man walk around the expensive German machine, open the rear door, and extend a hand to assist whomever was in the backseat.
A pale white hand grasped the driverâs. After a moment, a woman with shoulder-length gray hair and sunglasses stood beside the car as the driver shut her door. She was not unattractiveâin a wealthy, snobby kind of way. Her pose accentuated thin, but not frail, limbs and a torso hinting at personal trainer visits. Her crĂšme-colored sleeveless blouse, tailored slacks, and shoes his daughter had once told him were called wedges exuded confidence. The woman held what looked like an expensive pocketbook.
Blu walked outside and approached the pair. âCan I help you?â
The woman, who was more attractive up close with high cheekbones, a small nose Blu guessed was natural, and a perfectly- proportioned neck adorned with modest pearls, said, âIâm looking for a Mr. Carraway.â
âYou found him.â
âGood.â She turned to the driver, who upon closer inspection had an athletic build with a slightly visible shoulder rig beneath his suit coat. âTold you this was the place.â
He said, âYes, maâam.â
It didnât sound like the man was convinced.
Two of Bluâs horses, at least he called them his because they wouldnât leave his property even though there was no fencing, clomped around the house and approached. These were the curious ones from the herd, and not the brightest. Heâd named them Dink and Doofus.
The womanâs mouth opened in surprise.
Her driver, apparently startled, reached inside his jacket where the shoulder rig was.
Blu said, âDonât mind these two. Theyâre harmless. But if you see a black stud, best keep your distance.â
The woman watched the horses approach. Dink, the brown male with a tangled mane, lowered his head and sniffed. Doofus, his coat best described as dirty snow, lumbered up to the woman. In a past life, these two must have been canines.
Blu said, âCome on, guys.â
As if the horses just noticed he was there, they both raised their heads and snorted. Doofus gave his mane a quick shake.
The woman reached out and touched Dink on his nose.
The horse granted her hand a big lick before she could retract it.
Dink and Doofus didnât approach just anybody. Blu had recognized this trait in them a long time ago. They liked this woman. Or else they just thought she had a treat for them.
Blu said, âWhat can I do for you fine folks?â
âMr. Carraway,â the woman said, maneuvering around Dink and offering a business card. âIâm Cynthia Rhodes.â
Blu held the card. âThatâs exactly what this says.â It also gave a Charleston, South Carolina address. South Battery, no less. Big money.
Real big money.
She said, âYes, well, Iâd like to talk to you about employing your services.â
Tapping the card on his open palm, he said, âI appreciate your effort to get here, Ms. Rhodes. I would have gladly met you somewhere closer to Charleston. Saved you the forty-minute trip.â
The driver stepped forward and the horses retreated to the other side of the vehicles. âThere must be something wrong with your phone.â
An image of a stack of unpaid bills came to mind, specifically the one marked âthird and final notice.â Blu didnât reply.
Cynthia Rhodes said, âIs there someplace we can sit and talk?â
Coming to his senses, Blu said, âOf course. Iâm sorry. I donât normally receive clients out here. Please come this way.â He ran through a mental checklist: the office was one chair short for this group, the desk was a mess, the hula girl was on the floor, and the bathroom hadnât been cleaned in, well, he couldnât remember when.
Ms. Rhodes and her driver followed him, all of them crunching on the shell drive, up the porch stairs, and into the office heâd created out of the living room of the one-story bungalow his great- great-grandfather had built.
His guests didnât comment on the disheveled appearance.
The driver pulled out the single client chair in front of Bluâs desk and Cynthia Rhodes sat.
Blu made an assumption the man would prefer to remain standing seeing as how his role could best be described as armed chauffer. Walking around his desk, being sure to step over the hula girl on the floor, and noticing the crumpled tax bill flittering in the wind of the ceiling fan, Blu sat on the ripped cushion of his ancient captainâs chair. It gave a long, un-oiled squeak. âOkay, Ms. Rhodes, tell me why you think you need my services.â
Cynthia Rhodes removed her sunglasses and held them in her lap.
She looked at him with deep blue eyes. âMr. Carraway, I have a situation Iâm not sure how to handle.â
The horsesâ intuition and this womanâs bold and transparent acknowledgement of uncertainty regarding her situation had him trusting her almost immediately. Well, those reasons and the big tax bill he had to pay.
âCan I get either of you something to drink?â he asked. âIâve got tap water or coldâI mean icedâcoffee.â Cold was a more accurate statement, but he didnât think it sounded sophisticated enough.
Cynthia Rhodes said, âNo, thank you.â
Meeting her deep blue gaze, he guessed she was mid-fifties, about ten years his senior. He asked, âHow can I help?â
âI was told you could be trusted.â
âBy whom?â he asked.
âAdam Kincaid.â
With the name, Blu immediately understood the depth of her need, if not the specifics.
She continued. âHe said you got his daughter back for him when those awful men took her.â
âMore or less.â Kincaidâs daughter was returned to her father intact, physically if not emotionally, without paying any ransom. And the world had lost a half-dozen kidnappers. âHas your daughter been kidnapped?â
With a tight-lipped smile and a slight headshake, she said, âI have a son.â
He said, âWhat is it you think I can do for you?â
âHeâs missing.â
âHow do you know?â
She looked down. âMy son and I have a strained relationship, to say the least. The only way I know heâs okay is because he makes withdrawals from his trust fund.â
Blu said, âHe hasnât made any in a while?â
âTwo weeks.â She looked at him. âI was told you handle unique situations. That they were your specialty.â
Her driver smirked.
Blu said, âYou donât want the police involved?â
âNo,â she said. âI mean, not yet.â
He sat back. âWhat would you like me to do?â
âIsnât it obvious?â she asked, her voice breaking for the first time.
âYouâd like me to find him?â
âYes.â
It sounded more like a question.
He said, âI can do that.â
âMy son is a sweet boy. He likes artâpainting. If somethingâs happened to him, Iâm not sure what Iâd do.â
Blu had a hunch the real reason she was here was about to surface.
She said, âMr. Kincaid told me you made the men who took his daughter pay for their sins.â
âYou think someone did something to your son?â
Folding her arms across her chest, she said, âI hope not.â
Blu shook his head. âAnything that may or may not have happened in Mexico was a by-product of the goal of the job, which was to get his daughter back.â It was a true statement, but not really the truth.
Cynthia Rhodes reached into her pocketbook, removed a check, and handed it to Blu.
Chapter Two
The amount written in neat, precise cursive would do a lot more than just pay his property tax for the year. He handed the check back, trying hard not to show any reluctance to do so. âI donât take on blood jobs.â Another true statement which wasnât the truth.Sometimes they ended up that wayâbloody.
Her eyes were wide. âBut youâre my last hope.â
Blu laced his fingers together and placed his hands on the desk. âThat makes me feel all warm and fuzzy.â With a slight head jerk, he motioned to her driver. âWhy not send trigger-happy Rick, here?â
Blu already knew the answer. The man was mostly show. He appeared to be in shape. But he did not have a killerâs gaze.
She looked at her driver who shifted his weight between his feet as if he were nervous.
Holding a hand up, Blu said, âYou donât want to have things too close to home. I understand. Better to hire some schmuck and make him do the heavy lifting.â
âYouâre mistaken,â she said. âI heard you were the best.â
âI am the best,â he said. âCanât you tell by the crowds of folks lining up for my services?â
With a smile breaking the tension in the lines of her face, she said, âAdam also said you had an odd sense of humor.â
Blu didnât know what to say, so he kept quiet. Filling voids in conversation only gave away too much.
Cynthia Rhodes filled in the void for him. âIf it isnât enough money, Iâll double it.â
The Kincaid job had netted enough to keep Carraway Investigations solvent for three years, with only a modest contribution from an insurance or surveillance job here and there. And lately, some day laboring. The offer in front of him was eerily similar. Of course, Blu and his partner, a biker and fellow Ranger named Mick Crome, had barely made it out of Mexico alive with Jennifer Kincaid. Blu was three years wiser now, and he enjoyed the clichĂ© âgetting older by the minuteâ more than the one about âbeing worm food.â
He ignored one of his golden rules: Decisions made under duress were usually tainted. âOkay. Iâll look into it. But if all you want is a trigger puller, Iâm out.â
And then he lied to himself about it not being because he needed the money.
After Cynthia Rhodes signed a standard, boiler-plate contract, which had jammed Bluâs ancient printer twice in the process, and gave him a picture of her son, she and her driver left. Happy to be working again, Blu headed into town, taking the decade-old photo of Jeremy Rhodes with him, the most recent one his mother had. It showed a good-looking, normal kid with clear eyes and a boyish smile and dimples.
The drive into Charleston gave Blu time to think. A few things about this new job already bothered him. First: Cynthia Rhodes, the kidâs supposed mother, didnât have a current picture of her son. Second: For all he knew, Jeremy could be trying to run away from dear old mom.
Cynthia Rhodes had no idea where her son was and couldnât remember the last time sheâd seen or spoken with him. When Blu asked about drug use, she seemed flippant. All she knew was Jeremy had gone to the College of Charleston and majored in Liberal Arts, graduating two years ago.
Frankly, if it werenât for the money and his lack of it, Blu wouldnât have been so eager to take the job. The fact sheâd doubled the offer erased any hesitation he might have had.
When he turned onto King Street, he found a parking spot at a meter in front of Willieâs Music Shop. He put some change in the meter and walked inside. His friend Willie Day had owned and run the place since the eighties, weathering Hurricane Hugo and urban blight. Willie always seemed to know what was going on no matter what Blu asked about. After Willie had passed on to the other side not too long after 9/11, his daughter took over, running the store during the cityâs current rejuvenation. And, like her father, she had connections all over town.
Billie Day stood beside a wall display of Fender guitars, talking to a very early twenty-something white male. A black tank top and a short crop of hair exposed Billieâs light brown arms and neck. Her jeans accentuated curves that always put Blu in a good mood. She gave him a slight nod but kept her main focus on the customer.
Blu rotated his sunglasses to the top of his head and pretended to browse while he waited for Billie to make the sale. Desert Storm had done a number on his hearing, but he distinctly heard the sum âthousand evenâ and silently congratulated Billie.
After the kid had paid and walked out with his purchase protected in a nice case sheâd talked him into buying, Billie walked over to Blu.
With hands on nice hips, she said, âWhat can I help you with?â
What she said was a little more formal than Blu had been looking for in a greeting. Apparently, Billie was more than a little pissed at him for not calling. It had been six months, right about the time his tax situation derailed him.
He said, âHi, Billie.â
âHi, Billie? Is that what youâre going with?â
âUmââ
She put a finger to his lips. âDonât even try to dig yourself out of this one, Blu.â
He looked into powerful, deep brown eyes and almost winced.
Her gaze lightened. âWhy didnât you just tell me your tax troubles?â
Blu looked down. He should have assumed she knew.
She lifted his chin. âFriends help each other. They donât shut each other out.â
âItâs my problem to fix,â he said.
âBut it doesnât have to be, baby. You made it so.â
A lot of thoughts ran through his stubborn head. Like how someone five years his junior had it so much more together than he did. And how someone could care about him so much after all these years.
He said, âIâve got another job now. A good one. Hell, the retainer alone is enough to pay off Charleston County and then some.â
âYouâve got a job now, huh? Is that why youâre here?â
âNot the only reason.â
She patted his chest. âBefore we get to that, youâve got to make this up to me.â
âIââ
With a nudge from her hip, she said, âI donât want to hear excuses. I want you to take me out and treat me proper. Everything has a price. My price for being ignored is a date. Take it or leave it.â
Heâd always loved this woman. The timing was never right. Heâd come back from the war all screwed up and sheâd just turned eighteenâbad timing.
By the time heâd gotten his head screwed back on straight, she was twenty. And he married someone elseâbad timing.
When heâd been about to get a divorce, his wife turned up pregnant. They stuck it out another five years before ending it just in time for Billie to marry someoneâbad timing.
And then Billie divorced, she and Blu were set to be together, and his money problems startedâbad timing.
But now he had this new job, his money problems abated, and she was still available. He just hoped he wouldnât mess it up this time. So, in answer to her request for a date as restitution for him being a complete moron, he said, âOkay. Iâll take it.â
âGood,â she said. âPick me up at eight.â
He thought about going ahead and asking her if she knew Jeremy Rhodes, but he decided not to push his luck. She wasnât his only source, just his favorite.
He smiled and gave her a peck on the cheek.
She said, âAre you going to call Crome?â
Chapter Three
Blu stepped out of the music store and onto the broken sidewalk of upper King Street. The nice shops had been encroaching this direction for some time and had almost made it. Willieâs Music had always been a novelty. Now it was a novelty on prime real estate. And Billie had politely turned down several decent offers to sell. Blu couldnât blame her. The business held its own, and she liked what she did.Her asking if he was going to call Crome meant she was more than a little concerned about the job.
Mick Crome, his sometime business partner, had vanished with his half of what was left of the fee after expenses from the payout of the Kincaid job. The last Blu heard, Crome had ridden his Harley all the way down to Key West and hadnât come up for air since. And not a day went by that Blu didnât think about his friend.
Heâd give Crome a day or two. The guy had a knack for showing up at the right time. If he hadnât returned to Charleston by then and things got out of hand, Blu would make a few calls.
The picture Cynthia Rhodes gave him of her son didnât help as he would have to assimilate what Jeremy looked like now, most likely factoring in extensive drug use as an age agent.
What he needed was a current picture, at least one more current than ten years. Because heâd let his cell phone plan expire when he ran out of money, he bought a prepaid âburnerâ phone at a drug store. The teenage girl who rang up his purchase helped him set it up and he gave her a five-dollar tip.
Using the cigarette lighter in the Land Cruiser to power the phone, he dialed a number from memory.
It went to voicemail.
When prompted to leave a message, he said, âGladys, this is Blu Carraway. I know itâs been a while, but I could use a favor. Call me when you can.â He left the burnerâs number and closed the phone.
With that accomplished, some theme music was required. He selected a cassette and loaded it in the Land Cruiserâs tape deck. After a moment, the bass riff from âThe Waiting Roomâ by the punk band Fugazi played through the speakersâwhat a band.
The phone vibrated on his leg. He turned down the music volume and answered the call.
Gladys said, âCertainly has been a while, Mr. Blu Carraway. What lowlife are you after now?â
Ten years ago, about the same time the picture of Jeremy Rhodes was taken, Blu intervened in a domestic abuse situation. Gladys found him through a friend and tried to hire him. Apparently, none of the other local private investigators would bother to talk with her, much less take her job. At the time, her husband was taking out his frustrations for being a bakery delivery man on Gladys. When Blu found out she worked at the DMV, he handled the job pro bono, figuring the connection was worth it. In the end, a police investigation confirmed her husband had died while trying to beat her againâa clear case of self-defense as far as anyone was concerned. Blu didnât lose any sleep over it when the police found the knife sticking out of the manâs neck with Gladysâ prints on it. In Bluâs mind, any man who struck a woman in anger deserved no less. Gladys had done the deed, but only after Blu suggested she already had enough evidence to prove self-defense. Heâd been a stoneâs throw away when it happened, which most likely also encouraged and empowered the woman to take action.
And Gladys, with her connection to every licensed driver and registered vehicle in the state of South Carolina, had indeed proved helpful. The Driverâs Privacy Protection Act of â92 protected a driverâs information from getting outside the appropriate government agencies. But it didnât apply to licensed PIâs like Blu who had a wide range of access. Through experience, Blu found an inside source usually trumped his own sleuthing skills. With her abusive husband gone, Gladysâ life had changed dramatically for the better. He knew she would happily keep returning the favor.
He said, âI need a photo of someone.â
âLet me get something to write with.â A pause, then, âOkay, shoot.â
He gave the name and approximate age of Jeremy Rhodes.
She said, âI get off work in two hours. Buy me a milkshake at the Chick-fil-A down the street.â
âYou got it.â He ended the call.
With time to kill, Blu had two things in mind. One was to research exactly who Cynthia Rhodes was. And the second was to squeeze in a workout at the gym. His first stop was the local library where he signed onto a computer and looked up his new client. Normally he would have done this before accepting the job, but her check was awfully big.
Cynthia Rhodes was indeed a Charleston socialite. She managed a charitable organization named Lowcountry Second Chances and booked fundraisers all year long. A major benefactor for the charity was a shelter in North Charleston.
Once divorced, her ex-husband being one Jack Rhodes who had passed away five years ago from a heart attack, Jeremy was their only child. Jack had been a big deal in lowcountry real estate up until his passing.
Jeremy Rhodes, unlike his mother, had done a good job of flying under the radar. There was quite a bit on both of his parents on the web, but nothing about him except a few notifications of past showings of his artwork at some of the local coffee shops.
Being a private investigator wasnât in and of itself difficult work. Blu felt he had to keep his mind sharp and be able to think on his feet. And he had sources providing a lot of what kept him ahead of things. But it was also physicalâhe had to stay in shape. Quitting smoking, or at least switching to vapor, had several benefits, one being he could no longer afford it anymore anyway. And it also helped him breathe better during workouts.
With the preliminary research complete, Blu went to the gym. He kept a bag of gym clothes and gear in his truck, because he never knew when heâd get the opportunity. While his cardio had gotten a lot better since he switched to vapor, he still preferred the weights and got a good hour set in. Even with his money troubles, the gym membership would have been one of the last things to go.
Gladys faced a pink-colored milkshake in a booth in the restaurant when Blu sat across from her. A lot of people spent a lot of money to fight against looking their age. Gladys was not one of them. Past fifty, she had thick strawberry-framed glasses, gray hair, and a healthy dose of paunch. She had a few more years before sheâd have her time in with the state and she could retire on a full ride. When that happened, Blu would need another source. Gladys made it easier than having to deal with a lot of red tape, even though he also knew a lot of cops.
She sipped from the straw and slid a nine-by-twelve-inch envelope to him. Her short, plump body was mostly hidden by the table. âThey know me here. I told them youâd be paying. You gotta go to the counter.â
Blu stood, went to the counter, ordered a sweet tea, and paid for their drinks. He got his tea, sat across from Gladys again, picked up the envelope, and slipped out two sheets of paper, one an enlarged driverâs license picture and the other a vehicle registration for a late model Volkswagen Jetta. Listed was the South Battery address on the business card his mother had given Blu.
Gladys remained quiet.
Unlike the clean-cut boy in the photo Cynthia had given him, in this picture Jeremy Rhodes had black hair shaved on one side of his head with the length on top combed over to the other like an upside down mop. It contrasted with pale white skin like his motherâsâobviously not a beach dweller. He also had quite a few piercings: ears, nose, eyebrows, and both cheeks.
Blu pushed the photo back into the envelope. âThanks.â
âKid looks like a degenerate, you ask me.â
He hadnât asked her, but let it go. âHowâs your mom?â Last time he spoke with her, she was in the hospital.
âDead.â
âIâm sorry to hear that.â
Gladys nodded but didnât reply. Aside from the results of her lethargic and static lifestyle, she really did look much different from when she first walked into his office. Her usual grumpy demeanor aside, he knew sheâd become a new woman, quite content with who she was. With her newfound freedom from the abusive husband came what heâd observed to be inner strength.
She said, âOne more thing. I checked around. The carâs in impound. Been there a week.â
âThanks,â he said, âAnything I can do for you?â
She finished another round of slurping, licked her lips, and swallowed. âNah. Iâm good.â
Blu slid out of the booth and was ready to roll when she said, âThey got good sandwiches here.â
His first thought was she didnât want to eat alone. Even though he wanted to get back to the job, he said, âWhy donât we get something to eat? Iâm buying.â
She smiled for the first time. âOkay by me.â
After they ate chicken sandwiches and waffle fries, and he listened to her complain about her sister, Blu left the ray of sunshine that was Gladys and drove back into the city.
He wanted to check out the kidâs car, and he knew someone who would give him access, but it was too late in the day. First thing in the morning, heâd make a call.
The feeling Cynthia Rhodes wasnât telling him everything weighed heavy on him. Gladys had said Jeremy Rhodes looked like a degenerate. It wasnât his call to make, but Blu wouldnât hire the kid to pick shells on the beach, much less do anything requiring responsibility. If he was alive, what was the kid doing for money? It wasnât as if heâd ever had to work for anything.
At suppertime, still an hour before he had to leave to meet Billie, Blu filled the water trough for the horses with a garden hose. His grandfather had made the first mistake a long time ago when he gave one of the animals an apple. Since then, the herd of Carolina Marsh Tackeys, a breed indigenous to the lowcountry, had slowly become family, and caring for them had grown from a novelty to a chore. His father and Cuban mother had continued the practice while they lived there as well. The horses still fed mostly on the vegetation of the property and took care of themselves, the exception being when it froze. During the one week a year it got frigid in the lowcountry, Blu bought a few bales of hay to carry them through. Trying to get them into a barn would be a waste of time. Theyâd sooner trample him than be corralled.
By the time he finished and put the water hose away, he heard tires on the crushed shell drive.
âTwice in one day,â he said to no one in particular.
He didnât know how prophetic the statement really was until he watched Cynthia Rhodesâ shiny black Mercedes cut between the trees and pull up next to his old Land Cruiser, as before.
The driver got out of the Mercedes but didnât open the rear door. Instead, he marched toward Blu. Same dark suit and tie and bright white shirt. He wore sunglasses, just like Blu. It looked like Trigger Rick had come alone this time.
Dink and Doofus kept their distance.
When Trigger Rick got close, Blu said, âHowdy.â
The man didnât look happy. But then again, he didnât look happy the first time Blu had met him either. âHowdy yourself, Carraway.â He thumb-pointed to himself. âI could do the job. Iâm not sure why Cynthia thought she needed the help of some washed- up dick who hasnât had a real job in three years.â
Blu didnât reply. What was there to say?
Trigger Rick continued. âThe reason Iâm here is because Cynthia wanted a way to be in contact with you.â He reached into his jacket pocket and handed over a smartphone.
âI donât like those things,â Blu lied. More like he couldnât afford a smartphone. The service plans required monthly payments, something he hadnât been in a financial position to commit to in a while.
âLike I care.ââ
Blu held it out for the driver to take back. âStill, I canât accept it.â
âYou can and you will.â He retreated to the car. âYou think Iâm going to go back and tell Cynthia I didnât give it to you?â
Blu watched the man start the car, turn around, and drive away. Then he looked down at the phone in his hand. It was a nice iPhone.
While he was examining it, the device vibrated in his hands. He almost dropped it.
The name âCynthia Rhodesâ displayed on the screen.
Blu touched the green answer button and held it up to his ear.
âMr. Carraway?â It was her voice.
âYes.â
âGood. I hope you donât think me presumptuous, but I wanted to make sure we had a way of communicating.â
Blu watched as Dink, Doofus, and a mare named Molly Mae drank from the trough. He said, âI appreciate the gesture, but I canât accept this.â
âI insist.â
âWhat I mean is I need to get myself one for my business anyway.â
âConsider it a part of our deal and a bonus afterward. Itâs unlocked, and Iâve paid forward enough to last the rest of the year.â
He realized he wouldnât have to worry about getting the landline reconnected. It showed several bars of coverage even on his own slice of paradise located forty minutes away from anywhere else.
She said, âI also managed to get the last four digits to spell out âblue.ââ
âOh.â
âThatâs okay, isnât it?â she asked. âI mean, you can use it as a marketing gimmick if you want. You know, like âdonât feel blue, call Blue.ââ
He wondered how long sheâd worked on that one. Hopefully not too long. He decided not to correct her spelling of his name. âI really appreciate the gesture, Ms. Rhodes.â
âCall me Cynthia.â
Her driver had called her Cynthia. How close were they?
He didnât mention that either. Instead, he said, âOkay. And you can call me Blu.â
âGood.â
âCynthia?â
âYes?â
âHow long has your driver been working for you?â
âRick? Around two years. Why?â
If Blu handled this poorly, it could jeopardize being able to continue calling her Cynthia. He said, âWhy isnât he looking for your son? I can tell he believes heâs capable.â
After a pause, she said, âMr. Carraway. That is precisely why I hired you.â
The call ended.
And Blu wondered if he could still call her Cynthia.
***
Excerpt from In It For The Money by David Burnsworth. Copyright © 2017 by David Burnsworth. Reproduced with permission from David Burnsworth. All rights reserved.
Author Bio:
David Burnsworth became fascinated with the Deep South at a young age. After a degree in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Tennessee and fifteen years in the corporate world, he made the decision to write a novel. He is the author of both the Brack Pelton and the Blu Carraway Mystery Series. Having lived in Charleston on Sullivanâs Island for five years, the setting was a foregone conclusion. He and his wife call South Carolina home.
Good luck to your followers that enter the giveaway! This was a non stop action read!
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing and good luck to all! You're definitely going to love this one.
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