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Authors: Libby Fischer Hellmann

Tags: #Mystery & Detective / Women Sleuths

A Shot to Die For

A Shot to Die For

A Shot to Die For

Libby Fischer Hellmann

www.libbyhellmann.com

Poisoned Pen Press

Copyright © 2005 by Libby Fischer Hellmann

First Edition 2005

Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 2005903227

ISBN: 1-59058-185-7 Hardcover

ISBN: 9781615950959 ePub

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in, or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise) without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the publisher of this book.

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[email protected]

Dedication

For Deane and Steven
Playmates, support group, and all-around
extraordinary siblings

Acknowledgments

Among the folks who gave me their time, expertise, and stories were Helen Brandt at the Lake Geneva Historical Society, who clued me into
Newport of the West, 1870–1920
by Ann Wolfmeyer and Mary Burns Gage; the wonderful Pam Showalter-Blades; former Lake Geneva mayor Spiro Condos (aka Speedo); Pam Rawlinson; Mary Welk; Mike Black; Dave Case; Teri Mathes; Reba Meshulam; and Captain Ralph Bauman (aka Homer) of the Lake Geneva Police Department.

Also, someone I should have acknowledged long ago is Cindy Clohesey, who has graciously allowed me to “borrow” some of her best lines.

As always, The Red Herrings, who meet at Scotland Yard, deserve cheers. There is no better writing group in the universe. Thanks, too, to Michael Dymmoch and Barb D’Amato, who helped me out of a hole. And Roberta Isleib and Deborah Donnelly (“Sex” and “Lies”), without whose daily encouragement “Videotape” would be permanently out of focus.

A special acknowledgment to editor Nora Cavin, whose perceptive comments and suggestions were the reason this book came to be finished at all.

And, once again, my thanks to my Berkley editor, Samantha Mandor, whose grace and talent are unmatched; Barbara Peters, whose eye is unerring; and Jacky Sachs, the best agent in the business.

Finally, one last, loving tribute to my friend Susan White, the “Susan Siler” in my books. She will live forever on these pages.

Epigraph

Eight children were at play, seven sisters and their brother. Suddenly the boy was struck dumb; he trembled and began to run upon his hands and feet. His fingers became closed, and his body was covered with fur. Directly there was a bear where the boy had been. The sisters were terrified, they ran and the bear after them. They came to the stump of a great tree, and the tree spoke to them. It bade them climb upon it, and as they did so it began to rise into the air. The bear came to kill them, but they were just beyond its reach. It reared against the tree and scored the bark all around with its claws. The seven sisters were borne into the sky, and they became the stars of the Big Dipper.

N. Scott Momaday,
The Way to Rainy Mountain

Chapter One

“What do you mean you’re not coming? You were supposed to meet me! We had a date!” With each syllable, the woman’s voice slid up the register toward hysteria.

I slowed. I was walking toward the Lake Forest rest stop—an oasis, we call them here—just off the interstate near the Wisconsin state line. The woman was talking on her cell phone about thirty feet away, but her voice carried clearly. “How could you do this to me? After all our plans! You knew I’d be stranded!”

A man with a buzz cut and horn-rimmed glasses stood near the entrance, his hands in his pockets. He stepped aside as I approached.

“Look. I can’t talk long. I borrowed a cell.” There was a pause. “Mine’s out of juice.”

A tall, striking woman who appeared to be somewhere in her thirties, the woman on the phone wore a white T-shirt, khaki miniskirt, and sandals. Her shoulder-length hair, held off her face by a wide headband and a pair of shades, was a glossy black. Blue highlights glinted when she moved her head.

I went inside the building, which since its multimillion-dollar renovation, looked more like an airport terminal than one of the antiseptic fast-food places that used to commandeer pit stops on the highway. Donuts, pizza, coffee, and Chinese food beckoned me from cheerful kiosks, and it took all my resolve to resist them. I was tired, having spent the day scouting locations for a video about the Lodge, a luxury resort in Lake Geneva, Wisconsin. I’d stopped in for a cold drink before heading home to Rachel, my fifteen-year-old, who was in the midst of a what-am-I-going-to-do-all-summer-since-I’m-too-old-for-camp crisis.

I bought a Diet Coke, eyed the Krispy Kremes, and quickly headed back outside. A Thursday evening in the third week of June, it had been a hot and humid day. Now, though, a cool front was pushing through, and a breeze was chasing away the heat.

The woman was still on the cell. “I know. I’m sorry, too. I hate it when we fight.” There was a pause. “I realize that. It’s just—well, this has been a shitty day.”

The man who’d been standing near the entrance had his back to her as though he was trying not to listen to her conversation.

“I can’t. My cell is out of juice,” she repeated. “Okay. Thanks. I’ll be waiting. Please come soon.” The woman disconnected and looked around. Spotting the man at the entrance, she walked over and handed him the cell. “Thank you. You’ve been very kind.”

The man pocketed the cell. “No problem. I hope everything works out.”

“I’m sure it will.” She smiled. “Hope you catch some big ones.”

The man raised his hand and started across to the parking lot. The woman went inside. I looked at my watch. Almost seven. I wondered if Rachel had eaten. Maybe I should go back in and pick up a pizza. For now, though, I lingered outside with my drink, letting the cool breeze wash over me.

I was just about to go when the woman came back out, carrying a drink. She walked over to a three-foot-high brick wall that ran between the building and the parking lot. Turning her face into the wind, she lifted her hair off the back of her neck.

“Feels good, doesn’t it?” I said.

She nodded.

It had been hot in Lake Geneva, the breeze that usually keeps things cool apparently AWOL. For over a century, wealthy Chicagoans had escaped the blistering Midwest summer at the “Newport of the West,” where they built luxurious estates and fueled a culture of privilege and class that rivaled anything on Martha’s Vineyard or Nantucket. Though the resort’s exclusivity had faded over time, tourists still flocked to it, a fact that had not gone unnoticed by developers. The Lodge’s owners snapped up their property as soon as it became available, proving once again that as landmarks turn populist, they become marketable.

Now, though, I was twenty miles southeast, at the only rest stop between the North Shore of Chicago and the Wisconsin state line. Access ramps led from the highway to a paved surface the size of a football field. The building that housed the food court occupied the middle of the tarmac and hung over both sides of I-94. Parking lots flanked with gas pumps sat on both sides.

The young woman sighed. “I guess it’ll turn out okay after all.”

I looked over. “Bad day?”

“You don’t know the half of it.”

The door to the restaurant opened, and an elderly couple came out. The man, his thick white hair neatly parted on the side, carefully avoided eye contact with both of us. His companion, a seventyish woman with a wide-brimmed straw hat, tightened her lips when she saw me. I wondered what I’d done to annoy her or whether she was just the kind of person who disapproved of everyone. The young woman flashed me a sympathetic smile. I smiled back.

As the couple made their way to the parking lot, four red-faced kids in tanks and shorts pushed past on their way into the rest stop. They smelled of sweat and sun block and seemed oblivious to everything except themselves.

“I couldn’t help overhearing. I hope your ride gets here soon,” I said.

The young woman tipped her head. “Me, too. I’ve lost the whole day.”

“I hate fights.”

“It was—stupid.”

“They usually are.”

“It should never have happened.”

I nodded. The breeze was so refreshing I hated to leave. I slung the canvas bag that doubles as my briefcase onto my shoulder and joined her at the wall. As long as we were both hanging around, I might as well be nice. She perched on top, her legs dangling in front. Close up, she was stunning, her black hair thick and wavy—without a hint of gray, I noted enviously—her skin olive-gold. She had wide, jade green eyes, and those legs would pass what my father called the “Betty Grable” test with flying colors.

I pressed down on the tiny web of varicose veins above my knee, willing them to disappear, but they popped back out when I lifted my thumb off my skin. I sighed. “What’s your name?”

“Daria.” She swung her legs back and forth like a kid.

“I’m Ellie. Where are you from?”

“I live in Lake Geneva.”

“Small world. I’m producing a film up there.”

“A film?”

“Well, a video. At the Lodge. Do you know it?”

“The old Playboy Club?”

“That’s the one.”

Daria nodded. “I know it well.”

The Lodge had been built by Hugh Hefner in the early sixties and was a popular Playboy resort until his empire collapsed in the eighties. It passed through several sets of hands after that, each owner removing more traces of its glamorous X-rated past. Now it’s such a G-rated facility that a bronze statue of a father with a little boy on his shoulders greets guests at the entrance.

I scanned the cars heading up the ramp on our side of the rest stop. A silver Beamer slowly turned in, followed by a green pickup with a camper shell. “Is that your ride?” I pointed to the Beamer.

Daria shaded her eyes and looked. As the car passed, we could plainly see a couple in the front seat. The woman in the passenger seat motioned to an empty space in the parking lot. As the Beamer swerved into the spot, Daria seemed to deflate. “No.”

I hoisted my bag farther up my shoulder. “Well, don’t worry. I’m sure your boyfriend will be here soon.”

She was about to say something when the pickup that had been behind the Beamer passed us. It slowed to a crawl, and the window at the back of the camper shell slid open. The movement triggered a prickly feeling at the back of my neck.

I turned to Daria. She stared at the pickup. I was about to ask if she recognized it when I heard a loud crack. I whipped around. The pickup’s engine revved, and it tore out of the ramp. I turned back to Daria. A crimson design exploded on her shirt. She fell forward off the wall and crumpled to the ground.

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