Read Ms America and the Villainy in Vegas (Beauty Queen Mysteries No. 2) Online
Authors: Diana Dempsey
“Everybody strapped in?” cries the crane operator. “You all ready to eat the wedding dinner a couple hundred feet off the ground?”
Two dozen of us are strapped into seats around a rectangular dining table suspended from a 200-ton crane. Above us is a glass ceiling, as wide and long as the table. Soon all there will be below the platform to which our chairs are attached is open sky. We give the thumbs up for this twilight ride, some with more confidence than others. I’m on the more confident side because, well, you know me. Ms. America Happy Pennington is always up for adventure.
“How about the bride and groom?” the crane guy hollers. “Sally Anne and Frank, you two good to go?”
“Yessirree!” Frank shouts and we all cheer. He’s in his tux again, just as he was at the
Forever Yours
wedding chapel.
“You bet!” Sally Anne bellows. She’s wearing her wedding gown and is beaming so bright she rivals the neon on the nearby Strip. “This is Vegas, baby!” she yowls as the dining table begins, slowly but surely, to elevate.
I grasp Jason’s hand. “Tell me this isn’t worth staying an extra night for!”
“No can do, babe.” He looks handsome in a tan houndstooth sport coat and light blue shirt we bought on an emergency-shopping expedition after we learned that Sally Anne and Frank would be exchanging vows before a justice of the peace.
I’m wearing the strapless number with the swishy skirt that Trixie and Shanelle bought me to leave the hospital. I sure as heck do not miss the showgirl ensemble I had to sport for Sally Anne’s first nuptial attempt. I grin at my fellow beauty queens across the table. “Can you believe this?”
“I cannot!” Shanelle cries.
“What’ll they come up with next?” Trixie wants to know.
They both look adorable. Shanelle is in a pastel number with a twisted-bust and bubble hem and Trixie is wearing her maxi dress with the peacock feathers pattern. My mom’s dolled up, too, in a purple pantsuit with ornamental gold buttons.
She surprised me by wanting to invite Eddie Wozniak, dressed nattily in suit and tie. I hope his stupendous bowels hold up to dinner suspended above the Strip. Along with Sally Anne and Frank’s best friends, we’re also joined by Detective Perelli, her Uncle Vinny, Elaine from the Sparklettes, and Samantha St. James.
I chatted with Samantha before we sat down at the table. She admitted she feared that Brandon might have shot Danny to get him out of her life, and more to the point, out of her bank accounts. Since he won’t agree to seek serenity through her psychic advisor, she’s hoping he’ll see a counselor. I do, too.
Soon it appears we reach our final cruising altitude of 180 feet because the crane stops lifting us. That’s about the same height as the 18
th
-floor room I shared with my mom at the Cosmos. Here, too, as on our balcony, a light breeze ruffles my hair and the sound of the Strip is muted to a dull roar.
Las Vegas shimmers and glows, gaudy lady that she is. I will never forget the week I spent here. I am so happy that Sally Anne got her wish. She’s married her Frankie, and while he has a few things to work on, I know he loves her with all his heart.
We should all be so lucky. And some of us are. I remind myself of that every time a thought of Mario Suave creeps into my brain.
Frank calls out from the head of the table. “I’m not gonna stand up,” he begins and we all roar. That’s a big no no at this wedding reception. “But I do wanna say a few words. First and foremost, I’m at the top of the world right now and it’s not just because of the crane. It’s because of this lady right here.”
He pauses not only to grasp Sally Anne’s hand but to compose himself. I feel tears sting my own eyes.
“A few people said to me a while back, Frankie, how can you get engaged so fast? You barely know that Sally Anne! Well, I’ll tell you what I told them. At my age, when love kicks you upside the head, you don’t turn it away. You grab it and run away with it and hold on tight.”
Frank looks in my direction. “I needed to be reminded of that a few times this past week. But I’ll never forget it again. So let us toast”—he raises his flute and we all follow his lead—“to a long and happy life for all of us here present and to a peaceful rest for those who will never be able to join us again.”
“Hear, hear,” a few people say, and we sip our champagne. Three tuxedoed men stand in the open rectangle of space in the middle of the table, refreshing our glasses and serving our appetizer. As she suggested she might when I brought Chinese food to Crowning Glory, Sally Anne did switch the opening course to crab-stuffed mushrooms.
Shanelle leans forward. “Happy, you have got to give us a final run-through of how things stand! So who was the killer? Travis Blakely or Mickey Rose?”
“It was Travis. Mickey Rose ordered him to kill Danny to stop the blackmailing. Travis went rogue when he killed Cassidy. He confessed he got scared that she knew he shot Danny. So he stabbed her to keep her quiet.”
It’s so tragic. I bet Cassidy had no idea Travis was the guilty party. She seemed comfortable with him when I saw them together at the faux volcano eruption. But I’ll never know for sure.
“We have located the probable murder weapon,” Detective Perelli jumps in to say. She’s sitting a few guests to my left, wearing a black fit-and-flare sleeveless dress with a vintage flair. “We have to complete the ballistics tests but we found the weapon in Mickey Rose’s safe.”
“So if the tests come back like Detective Perelli expects,” I say, “she’ll be able to link Mickey Rose to the murder.”
“Who pushed you into the cryogenic chamber, Happy?” Trixie wants to know.
“That was Travis.” He almost did to me what he did to Cassidy, for the same reason: fear that I was getting too close to the truth.
Boy, am I proud of myself that I did eventually get to the truth. Those brain cells of mine did manage to come through in the end. I am getting really close to believing that it’s no fluke that I was able to solve a murder on Oahu and again here in Vegas.
Really close.
Jason pipes up with a question for the table. “Does anybody know how Danny Richter found out in the first place that Ziana couldn’t sing?”
Detective Perelli has that answer. “Apparently Blakely let it slip during a drinking binge with Richter.”
That was a fateful mistake on Travis Blakely’s part and Danny ran with it. He certainly made the most of all illegal moneymaking opportunities.
“How did
you
figure out about the lip-syncing, Happy?” Trixie asks.
I relay what happened in church. “There was also something Trixie said last night at the Rialto, about how we weren’t really dancers but only played them on stage. When I thought about that and remembered seeing the female gondolier at the recording studio, it came together in my mind.”
We move on to Chicken Kiev with sides of new potatoes and peas. I hear a tinkle of laughter to my right coming from Samantha, who’s wearing a pink and white sheath. I wonder how many of those she owns.
Trixie leans forward to whisper. “I’m glad she was smart enough not to bring Pucci tonight.”
Since Pucci is not equipped with wings, that would have been a bad idea.
“Looks like Uncle Vinny is taking a shine to Samantha,” Shanelle observes.
From the way he’s talking to her and only her, it certainly does.
“Good for her,” my mother pronounces. “She needs somebody sane to balance out that bum son of hers.”
Jason and I glance at each other and laugh. My mom may interview with Bennie Hana and take a job outside the home for the first time in her life but in all the important ways she’ll never change. And I’ll never want her to.
I’m going to have to do some changing, though, I bet. For starters, get used to Pop’s girlfriend. Maybe to mom being an office jockey. And to Jason making wild suggestions like our moving out of Ohio.
I knew when I became Ms. America it would be an eventful year. I never would have guessed
how
eventful.
We do another round of champagne toasts when the wedding cake is cut. It is as frothy a confection as I have ever seen. A few more of these toasts, I think to myself, and I’ll be even more grateful that I’m strapped into my seat.
“How in the world you gonna top this, girl?” Shanelle asks and raises her flute in my direction.
I raise mine right back. I have no idea. But I bet something will come to me.
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Continue reading for an excerpt from Diana’s latest release,
Ms America and the Mayhem in Miami
, the third installment in the series readers call “wonderful,” “funny,” and “a perfect summer beach read.”