Sweets Forgotten (Samantha Sweet Mysteries Book 10) (19 page)

BOOK: Sweets Forgotten (Samantha Sweet Mysteries Book 10)
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The lumpy surface of the box felt
familiar as she pulled it from its hiding place. She held it close to her body
and the wood began to warm. By the time she’d closed the safe and walked
upstairs, the normally dark stain had begun to glow to the color of honey. Her
mood rose, her steps feeling lighter. She set the box on her bathroom vanity
and undressed for the shower, allowing warm water to further soothe her tired
muscles.

In her mind, a picture emerged of
the cake she would bake for their anniversary. If she got up early in the
morning and went straight to the bakery she could create to her heart’s content
before the bustle of the real workday began. Shower finished, she dried and
dressed quickly, locating a piece of paper in her nightstand drawer and quickly
sketching the design for the cake before any of the details could escape. If
inspiration had come from her handling of the box, she knew the effect would be
temporary. Folding the page, she stuck it in the pocket of her work slacks,
draped over the bedroom chair, then headed for the kitchen.

She seasoned two chicken breasts,
grated parmesan and cut the florets from a head of fresh broccoli. Outside, she
heard Beau’s cruiser, his happy greeting for the dogs, the front door.

“Sorry I’m a little late,” he
called through the open doorway. “Had to stop off for one final interview.”

She couldn’t see him from where
she stood and found herself trying to read his tone of voice. Would their
earlier testiness resume?

“Dinner in about twenty minutes,”
she said. “I can hold it a little longer if you want a shower or a drink
first.”

His head peered around the
doorframe. “Let’s do a drink out on the deck first. It won’t be long before the
evenings are too chilly to sit out there.”

She set the vegetables aside and
dried her hands, heading toward the living room.

“Sounds good to—” She came to an
abrupt halt. On the coffee table sat an enormous bouquet of yellow roses—her
favorite.

“Beau—”

He came up behind her and wrapped
his arms around her waist. “It’s a little early for our anniversary, but I
don’t think it’s too early for an apology. I’m sorry for earlier.”

She turned to him, her throat
suddenly tight. “Me too. I don’t know why I—”

But she couldn’t talk just then
because his mouth was on hers. Dinner somehow got delayed as they stumbled up
the stairs and undressed more quickly than she ever remembered. The evening
became a pleasant blur of warmth and togetherness, wine and a good meal, back
to bed to settle into each other’s arms. Sam had reached that most pleasant
state of bliss.

Then the phone rang. Beau rolled
over and picked it up.

“Robinet?” he said. “I’ll be
right there.”

 
 

Chapter
20

 

Sam shivered in the passenger
seat of Beau’s cruiser, waiting for the heater to provide some bit of warmth.
The midnight phone call had startled both of them awake, their fuzzy mood
disappearing like a wisp of smoke in a gale. Dispatch had said only that there
had been an incident involving Josephine Robinet at the El Monte Hotel. Sam
knew there was no hope of her falling back to sleep once Beau left, so she
opted to come with him. He switched off his strobing lights as they pulled
under the hotel’s portico.

“I swear, Sheriff, no employee
here at El Monte gave out private information about Mrs. Robinet. We don’t even
have her real name on the registration.” The night manager fluttered about,
covering his bases. He seemed young, inexperienced, and worried for his job if
one of the hotel’s important guests should complain to upper management.

“Where is she now?” Beau asked.

“Was she harmed?” Sam blurted at
the same moment.

“She is shaken but unhurt. We have
installed her in another room and sealed off her old one for now.”

What on earth happened here? Sam
wondered as they followed the manager to the elevator. Beau suggested that they
first speak with Jo, then check out the room. The man inserted a key into a
slot on the elevator panel and pressed the top button, one with a small symbol
on it but no number. The car glided silently and opened to a small foyer
decorated in Southwestern chic. A private suite? Who knew Taos had anything
quite this exclusive? He gave a series of short knocks, evidently some code
devised for Jo. Beau seemed to approve of the extra measures.

A uniformed hotel guard opened
the door, surveyed the three, then admitted them.

“Sam!” Jo rushed forward wearing
a hotel robe over her long nightgown. Her hair was in tangles and without
makeup her face seemed young and scared.

“What happened?” Sam said,
meeting Jo’s outstretched arms and pulling her in.

Jo’s words spilled out, her hands
fluttering. “Phone calls, shadows … the window … someone at the door.”

 
“Maybe we should all sit down,” Beau said. He
turned to the guard and hotel manager. “I think we’ll be all right from here.
I’ll need a key to her previous room, please.”

The guard handed it over and the
two men left. Sam saw that the suite included a small kitchen, elegant living
room and two bedrooms. She offered to make tea or pour Jo a glass of wine from
the rack on the granite countertop.

“Nothing right now,” Jo said.

Sam filled the electric kettle
anyway.

Beau led the way into the living
room and let Jo take her choice of seats.

“I know this is upsetting and
probably a little disorganized in your mind, but if you could walk me through
it and tell me what happened and when?”

Jo took a breath and clenched her
hands to keep them still. “The first incident happened last night, shortly
after I checked in and settled into the room. The phone rang—I assumed it would
be Sam or someone from the hotel staff so I answered it. The caller quickly
hung up.”

“You didn’t say anything about
this to me at work today,” Sam said.

“I didn’t really think anything
of it. A wrong number, I assumed.”

“It might have been. What time
did it happen?” Beau was taking notes now. Sam shut off the kettle and brewed
two cups of tea, carrying them to the coffee table and setting them down for Jo
and herself.

“Early evening … maybe six
o’clock,” Jo said, in answer to Beau’s question.

“That’s all?”

“Last night, yes. Tonight, there
was another phone call. I had specifically asked the front desk not to put any
calls through. I let it ring four times but it just wouldn’t quit. I thought of
my son. Maybe he needed to reach me.”

“Had you told him you were
staying here?”

“Come to think of it, no, I
hadn’t.” She twisted a little in her seat. “The ringing began to worry me so I
picked it up. That time, someone was breathing. Just loudly enough to let me
know he was there.”

“So it was a male?”

“Well, I said ‘he’ but I can’t
really be sure.”

“What did you do? Did you speak?”

“I think I asked who it was. But
they didn’t say anything. It was creepy. I asked one more time then I hung up.
I think I paced the length of the room a time or two then took the phone off
the hook. Obviously, the desk people were not taking me seriously.”

Which would explain the manager’s
current state of anxiety.

“You said someone came to your
door?”

“That was later. I watched some
TV and tried to put the phone calls out of my mind. I went to bed and turned
out the light. I was almost asleep when I heard a noise at the window. On the
third floor I couldn’t imagine—”

“What sort of noise?” Beau asked.

“Small, at first, as if someone
threw a handful of gravel. That was my first thought but it seemed crazy. I
decided it was probably a tree branch, leaves brushing the glass, something
like that.”

“Did you get up and look?”

“Not right away. I kept telling
myself it was only the wind. But then I remembered what a still night it was.
And then I pictured the view from my window and realized there were no trees
close enough to the building. I stood to the side and peeked around the edge of
the curtain but couldn’t see anyone. The room looked out over a garden with
small pathway lights. It’s fairly dark out there.”

“We’ll check it out.” Beau seemed
skeptical of actually finding the stalker on the premises by now. “But that
wasn’t all, was it?”

“Right. The door. I laid awake
for about two hours and finally relaxed enough to doze off. But then I heard my
door handle rattle. I just froze to the spot, thinking I had dreamed it. But it
happened again, and a voice called my name. This creepy half-whisper. I think I
cried out. I’m not sure. My heart was pounding so hard and my hands were
shaking. I reached for the phone but it was still off the hook so I fumbled
around for my cell phone, but then I realized I didn’t have the number for the
front desk programmed in and—all this time I was shaking so bad. I put the
regular phone back and it took a minute for a connection, and then I called the
desk and by that time my voice was so shaky I don’t think they could understand
me. I had to repeat everything a few times.”

Sam reached out and took Jo’s
hand.

“While I was talking, the door
opened. I know it did—a beam of light from the hallway came in. I screamed and
yelled for the desk clerk to send help right away. The door closed again.”

“How long before the hotel guard
came up?”

“I don’t know …” She was sobbing
again. “I … It’s the first time in my life I remember feeling genuine panic. I
couldn’t move, I was so terrified. The guard opened the door with a passkey and
called out to me.”

“Okay,” said Beau, “you don’t
have to go back over that part. I’ll ask him about it. And we can post a deputy
in the suite’s foyer for the rest of the night.”

“Do you feel safe enough to stay
here?” Sam asked.

“I won’t sleep, if that’s what
you mean. But, yes, I’ll be all right if there’s someone guarding the door.”
She reached for the tea, which was lukewarm by now. “I need to be rid of the
Lexus. I’m sure having it outside is how the man knew I was here. I’ll take it
back to the house and put it in the garage again.”

“How about afterward?” Sam asked.

“I’ll have to think about that.”
Jo sipped the tea, while Beau looked over his notes.

“I can’t think of anything else
right now,” he said, “but we’ll check back with you in the morning.”

Morning, Sam thought as they took
the elevator down. It was already after two a.m. According to her original
plan, she would be getting up at four-thirty and heading to her shop to bake
their anniversary cake. Barely a moment’s sleep and already the new day was way
off track. She stood to the side as Beau spoke with the hotel manager, warning
him nothing better happen to Jo, and they would be answering directly to the
sheriff’s department if there were any further disturbances of this guest.

“Let’s go home,” he said, draping
an arm across Sam’s shoulders as they walked to his cruiser.

She leaned into him, all her
earlier energy from handling the box completely gone now.

When Sam’s cell phone jangled on
the bedside table, she rolled over, wanting badly to ignore it. Catching sight
of the readout, however, she saw it was Jo.

“Sam, I hope I didn’t wake you.”

Ugh. Even though she and Beau had
agreed not to set their alarms, it still felt awfully early.

“I wanted to let you know that
I’ve decided what to do. I stayed up all night and still didn’t feel safe alone
in this hotel. So I called my best friend this morning and I’m going to stay at
her house. I’ll take the Lexus home and put it out of sight in the garage
again. I’ll get a rental to drive around town. Surely, this person will be
caught soon, don’t you think?”

Evidently, Jo had several cups of
coffee under her belt this morning. Sam’s fuzzy mind struggled to process this
raft of new information.

“Hold on a second.” She turned to
Beau, who was rubbing his eyes, and told him what Jo had in mind.

He reached out and took the
phone. “Jo, I don’t think this is a good idea. Think about it. Anyone who knows
you and your movements will know your friends. You could be putting both of you
in danger.”

“Sorry, Sheriff. I’ve made up my
mind. Brenda lives in a very secure neighborhood, gated condo complex, and
she’s got a great alarm system. She practically begged me to come there when I
told her what happened last night.”

“Have you told anyone else?” He
rubbed the stubble on his chin.

“No. And I won’t. You’ll catch
the man soon and then I can go home. Until then, at least I’m not a prisoner in
a hotel.”

She hung up and Beau groaned as
he handed Sam’s phone back. “There’s some people you just can’t protect from
their own stupidity.”

He went into the bathroom. Sam’s
phone rang again almost immediately.

“I meant to tell you,” Jo said,
“I’ll be at the bakery this morning. I don’t want you to think you can’t count
on me.”

The bakery. Sam realized she was
running more than three hours late for everything she’d hoped to accomplish
today. She pulled her clothes on, raced through brushing her teeth, and was out
the door ten minutes later. Jo’s Lexus sat in the alley near Julio’s motorcycle.
That was another subject Sam wanted to address soon, to get Kelly to admit that
she and Julio were dating.

“Sam—I’m glad you’re here.” Jo
was boxing up chocolates from the assortment they had already completed. On the
worktable sat a new bag of cacao beans, ready for processing. “Can we talk for
a minute?”

By her bright-eyed appearance, Jo
obviously meant right now. Heavens—Sam hadn’t even removed her coat yet.

“I need at least one cup of
coffee before I have to process a single scrap of information,” Sam told her.

She greeted Julio and Becky and
went to the front where Jen had—bless her!—freshly brewed their signature blend
coffee. A woman in business attire was choosing a dozen pastries and a man with
a bulging gut called out his order for three bear claws. Sam bagged those,
picked up her own coffee mug and joined Jo back in the kitchen.

“Maybe we should talk privately?”
she suggested to Jo.

A quick glance toward the other
employees and Jo agreed. She slipped on a fleece jacket against the frosty morning
air and they stepped out to the alley.

“Let’s walk. It’s too cold to
stand around in the shade,” Sam suggested. “I assume this is about your plan to
stay with your friend. You know Beau isn’t crazy about that idea.”

“I know, but I told him how I
felt about it. Would you be willing to follow me over to my house sometime this
morning so I can leave the Lexus? The rental car company will deliver a car
here to the bakery around noon.”

They turned the corner and
crossed the street toward the plaza.

“Which brings up the other thing
I wanted to talk about. Sam, I’d really love to continue working for you. For
free, of course. Now that I have Zack’s half of the business I don’t have money
worries. I just need something to fill the hours and I love working with
chocolate.”

“Jo, I—” Sam started to say she
didn’t normally get all that many orders for chocolates.

“I’ll continue to help out at
ChanZack as needed, but that’s far from full time. Helen handles all the daily
entries so it’s usually only at tax season that I’m involved. With Zack gone
I’ll be needed to move money around among the investment accounts. He always
handled that.” She seemed to be clarifying all these details for herself more
than for Sam’s information.

“So, what do you think?” Jo said,
stopping in mid-sidewalk and facing Sam. “About my working for you.”

“Well, definitely until we get
this big order finished. After that, let me evaluate the situation. I don’t
know how much I’ll be able to keep you busy right now. Maybe more around the
holidays.”

Sam didn’t feel quite fueled up
yet, although her coffee was gone. She subtly steered Jo back toward Sweet’s
Sweets. Her mind not geared toward work yet, she suggested that this would be a
good time to take Jo’s car to its home garage. She poured more coffee into a
paper cup and got into her van to follow Jo home.

As they approached, the middle
garage door slid upward and Jo steered the Lexus inside while Sam waited in her
idling van in the spacious driveway. Jo trotted out a minute later.

“I thought of some things I want
to get from the house,” she said through Sam’s window. “Want to come in with
me?”

“I can wait out here.”

“It’ll only take a minute.” Jo
went back in through the garage, the door slid down.

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