Read Murder Strikes a Pose Online
Authors: Tracy Weber
Tags: #realtor Darby Farr gets pulled into the investigation and learns that Kyle had a shocking secret—one that could've sealed her violent fate. Suspects abound, #south Florida's star broker. But her career ends abruptly when she is fatally stabbed at an open house. Because of a family friend's longstanding ties to the Cameron clan, #including Kyle's estranged suicidal husband; her ex-lover, #Million-dollar listings and hefty commissions come easily for Kyle Cameron, #a ruthless billionaire developer; and Foster's resentful, #politically ambitious wife. And Darby's investigating puts her next on the killer's hit list., #Foster McFarlin
don’t know,” I admitted. “At least not yet. But Sarah was furious—
out of control, even—when George asked her for money. And she
flat-out told me that she’d kill George before she let him get near her son.”
“That’s merely an expression, Kate.”
“I know, but it shows how upset she was, even days later. Who
knows what she might do in a rage? And Rick obviously loves his
family. He might have killed George to protect Sarah and Davie in some twisted way.”
“Seems pretty flimsy to me.”
I picked up my coffee cup—empty. Nine shots was a new re-
cord, even for me. I didn’t dare go for ten. Frustrated, I slammed the empty cup down on the desk.
“Fine. What about George’s old business partner, Robert, then?
He blamed George for ruining their business. He has motive!”
“We looked into all that, too, Kate. That business dissolved over ten years ago. A decade seemed like an awfully long time to hold a grudge, but we checked him out anyway. He was at Tech Life Expo
in New York City the night of the murder.”
“So he says. Anyone can sign up for a conference. It doesn’t
mean he actually went.”
Martinez was firm. “In this case, it does. Robert was one of the
presenters. Over 300 attendees can verify his alibi. Which puts us right back where we started: a mugging or a garden-variety street 176
crime.” She softened her tone. “I know you don’t want to hear this, Kate, but your friend’s murder may go unsolved.”
“There has to be something else we can do. We can’t let
George’s murderer go free!”
Martinez spoke slowly and deliberately. “There is no
we
in this, Kate. You are not a member of the police force. Henderson and I
are already doing everything that can be done. Nobody needs your
help.”
Fueled by an overdose of espresso and muddled by lack of
sleep, I opened my mouth and inserted my Birkenstock-clad foot.
“That’s not true. If George weren’t indigent, you’d be working this case a lot harder and you know it. You two may not think George’s life was worth much, but I do. If you’re too apathetic to do your job, I’ll have to do it for you!”
As soon as the words tumbled out, I wished I could take them
back. Martinez was the one ally I had on the case. At least she used to be.
“Pay attention, Kate, and pay attention closely,” she warned.
“You are not a part of solving this case. I’ve put my neck on the line telling you this much. The last thing we need is an untrained civilian messing up the investigation. Now back off. You’re doing way more harm than good.”
“But—”
“I mean it!
Back the hell off.
If you harass even one more person about this case, including me, I’ll arrest you myself!”
For the second time in less than twenty-four hours, I heard
nothing but dial tone. Martinez had hung up.
Muttering phrases that should never pass the lips of a yoga
teacher, I slammed down the phone, picked up my coffee cup, and
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threw it. It sailed across the room and smashed into the wall, barely missing the forehead of an elderly woman.
Where had she come from?
“Oh, my!” she gasped, bringing her hand to her mouth and
dropping the flyer she’d been reading. She turned and scurried out the obviously
not
securely locked front door. Why, oh why, hadn’t I called a locksmith?
I picked up the flyer dropped by my not-in-this-lifetime stu-
dent. “Yoga for Inner Peace.” Perfect. Just perfect.
I felt bad about frightening her. I felt worse about insulting Detective Martinez. But I hadn’t gotten much sleep, no one appreci-
ated my efforts, and the person I was trying to help had likely been a thug. I had every right to be a little grouchy.
_____
This had better work
, I thought, as Bella and I headed north on I-5 to Snohomish. Less than five hours after what would forever be known as “the coffee cup incident,” I was in no mood for another failure.
Traffic slowed to a crawl. Why hadn’t I chosen a dog trainer near Greenwood? Bella settled in for the long drive and fell fast asleep. I settled in and tried to stay awake. Her snoring taunted me.
Forty-five minutes later, we pulled into a long, gravel driveway
and stopped at an automatic gate. I opened the car door to com-
plete silence. Not a single bark? In a dog training center? Maybe we had the place to ourselves.
As I neared the building, a single warning bark pierced the air,
followed by a strict, staccato “Shush!” Silence again. Impressive.
A tall, well-built man dressed in impeccably tailored clothes
emerged from the building. He grabbed my hand. “Hi, I’m Jim,”
he said, crushing my fingers. “You must be Kate. Come with me.”
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He turned on his heels and marched back to the building, not
showing a single doubt that I would follow.
I followed.
Compared to Betty’s office at the rescue, this place was a cas-
tle. Clean, sanitary, large and bright, Jim’s office had a huge desk, state-of-the-art computer system, and ample space for several
guest chairs. I glanced around. Trophies lined the shelves, and
framed photos of ribbon-bearing dogs adorned the walls.
Jim sat behind the desk and got straight to business. “Now tell
me more about this dog of yours.”
“She’s not my dog,” I replied automatically. She’s just staying
with me until I can find her a new home. But she doesn’t like other dogs, and she’s not very fond of some people, either.”
Jim leaned forward. “What makes you think that?”
I laughed. “Well, it’s pretty obvious. When she sees another
dog she goes crazy—kind of like the canine version of
Jaws
. But as soon as they’re out of sight, she calms right back down.”
“She’s a German shepherd, right?”
“Yes.”
He looked at me appraisingly. “What do you weigh? 115, 120?”
“About that.” I wasn’t about to admit those extra ten pounds.
“And you’re a yoga teacher?”
“Right …”
“And I’ll bet you’re one of those vegetarian types too, aren’t
you?”
“Uh-huh …” Where was this going?
Jim interlaced his perfectly manicured fingers. “I hate to tell
you this, but
you’re
the problem. You’re too nice to own a German shepherd.”
“Too nice?” He had to be kidding, right?
179
“German shepherds need a strong hand. If you’re weak, they’ll
run all over you. But don’t feel bad. Most of my clients with ‘problem’ dogs have this same issue. Generally speaking, the
dog
isn’t the problem. The
people
are. They treat their dogs like human children, and it just doesn’t work.”
“Huh?” Not very eloquent, but I was flabbergasted. I was
not
the problem, Bella was. As for treating her like a child, I hadn’t exactly dressed her up in a tutu and enrolled her in nursery school.
Jim stared directly into my eyes, without flinching. “Let me
make it simple for you. Your dog thinks you’re a wimp. She doesn’t respect you. She’s the alpha, and she wants to keep it that way. So she fights with other dogs to establish her dominance over them.
If you want to control her, you’ll have to become the alpha—the
human pack leader. But that takes a strong hand and a confident
demeanor.” He smiled, displaying teeth too perfectly straight to be real. “Cute little thing like you probably doesn’t have it in her.”
“I may be little, but I’m scrappy,” I replied, a little insulted. “Besides, Bella had this same problem with her previous owner. I’ll admit that she’s worse with men than she used to be, but she’s always hated other dogs.”
“She was probably alpha over her prior owner, too. Your dog
obviously needs a very strong hand.” He stood up. “Come with me.
I’ll show you what I’m talking about.”
I followed him into a large, cavernous space. A gorgeous red
Doberman stood caged in the back. “That’s my dog, Duke,” he
said. “He’ll be our bait dog.”
“Bait dog?” That didn’t sound good.
“Some trainers call them neutral dogs,” Jim replied. “But I be-
lieve in calling a spade a spade. I work with lots of dominant dogs like yours. Duke here helps me teach them their place.” He opened 180
the cage and snapped a leash on the gorgeous animal. Duke qui-
etly followed him to the back of the room.
“Duke. Down,” Jim commanded. “Stay.”
“What’s that thing around his neck?”
“Oh, that’s a training collar. It’s a very useful tool. It allows me to gently shock Duke if he misbehaves.”
I’d never experienced anything I would describe as a “gentle”
shock, but I didn’t volunteer that information. While Jim contin-
ued extolling the virtues of “training collars,” I watched Duke.
I had to admit that Duke acted like a paragon of proper doggy
behavior. He lay on the floor, stone still. He didn’t so much as a twitch while his owner and I chatted. After about ten minutes, Jim left and returned with a timid-looking husky. It wore a choke collar tight and high on its throat.
“This guy’s been with me a little over three weeks,” Jim said.
“When he first arrived, he couldn’t be within fifty yards of another dog without going berserk.”
Jim walked the husky progressively closer to Duke. It averted
its gaze, panting and trembling. About two feet away, the husky
locked eyes with Duke and froze. I steeled myself, mentally preparing for Dog Fight Central.
Jim snapped the collar, and hissed a loud “eh!” The husky turned
his head and kept walking. Duke still hadn’t moved an inch. I was impressed.
Jim smiled and looked at me confidently. “Now, as you can see,
we’re not quite there yet with this one, but he’ll be perfect by the time his owners come and get him next week.”
“The dogs you train stay here?”
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“Ideally, yes. I like to keep my canines-in-training away from
their owners’ bad influences. That way I can have complete control over them.”
“Sounds expensive.”
“Not when you consider what you get. It’s only $5,000. And of
course, we accept all major credit cards.”
Five thousand dollars? I’d have to rob a bank. “There’s no way
I can do that.”
Jim hesitated. “Well, you
could
work at home with your dog, but I can’t guarantee the results …” He paused, as if thinking.
“Tell you what. Let me show you another dog that recently start-
ed my program. Once you see the beginning stages of this work, I’m sure you’ll understand why you should leave it to a professional.”
He left the room, taking the husky with him. He returned with
a strong, powerful-looking brown and white dog. “This fellow’s an akita,” he said. “Akitas are one of the most willful breeds. They’ll take any opportunity to become pack leader. He’s only been with
me for three days.”
Jim walked the akita back and forth, ever closer to the still mo-
tionless Duke. About twenty feet away, the akita bared his teeth
and lunged. Jim leapt into action. He jerked on the lead, tightened the choke collar, and lifted the akita off the ground, hanging it by its neck. The dog fiercely struggled, spinning and snapping, until Jim slammed it to the ground and pinned it under his legs. “This is called an alpha roll,” he said, breathlessly.
The akita lay on the ground, motionless, as urine pooled on
floor. I suspected it didn’t come from Jim. “Ah, submission. Ex-
actly what I was looking for. Now he knows who’s boss.”
Jim stood up and recommenced walking the now trembling
akita back and forth in front of Duke. The dog held his head down, 182
averted his gaze, and pretended Duke didn’t exist. Jim smiled, obviously pleased at his training accomplishment.
“Well, now you can see for yourself how effective good training
can be. But do you really think a cute little thing like you can do it?
You’d be much better off investing some money and leaving this
work to the pros.”
I stared at Jim, speechless. He smiled, looking positive that
he’d convinced me. “Think about it for a minute. I’ll put this guy back in his pen. Then we can talk.” Jim left with the akita. Duke remained lying on the floor, motionless.
I had a long, hard conversation with myself while Jim was gone.
The yoga teachings were very clear on the subject of violence. Yogis must live by the principle of ahimsa, or non-harming, in all
situations. Still, I lived in the real world. And in the real world, violence was sometimes a necessary evil. In some situations, the
results of using force outweighed the costs.
In the end, I decided this wasn’t one of them.
Instead, I applied a different teaching, even though it was sig-
nificantly more challenging. I chose to be neutral toward evil. I summoned every single ounce of my willpower. I used every ele-ment of self-control that my yoga practice had taught me.
To my surprise, it worked. I successfully refrained from punch-
ing that sadistic SOB in the nose before I marched out the door.
_____
“Positive his methods work, indeed,” I mumbled.
“Macho jerk. I can think of a place or two I’d like to put that
shock collar …”
Bella was quiet on the subject, but I could tell she agreed com-
pletely.
183
As I raced away from Jim’s obviously
not
positive training center, I couldn’t quite let go of my outrage. I couldn’t shake an image of Bella being hung by her neck or reeling in pain from some me-dieval torture-like collar.
My emotions surprised me. I was embarrassingly familiar with
anger; the morning’s coffee-cup incident demonstrated that per-
fectly. But this feeling was different. It was an intense, almost uncontrollable energy, vibrating from deep in my core.
Protect, protect,
protect. I must protect.