Rogue Page 40
Okay, that wasn’t the only possible result, but definitely the likely conclusion. But did I actually suspect him?
I wasn’t sure. I couldn’t see how Kellie Tandy fit in at all. Not yet, anyway. And if Harper had killed her, was it mere coincidence that he’d been killed only two days later?
“Have you ever seen any other cats in the strip club, stray or otherwise?” Marc asked, when I failed to respond to Kevin’s question.
“Nah. There’re only two others in the area, that I know of. The youngest Pierce boy goes to Loyola, but the college kids don’t hang out around here. And Jamey Gardner lives near Baton Rouge, but I haven’t seen him in nearly a year.”
I nodded toward Forbidden Fruit’s back door. “Do you know Jeff the pip-squeak?”
“Yeah. He’s one of the bartenders. His brother owns the place.”
“Did he know Harper?” Marc asked.
“I don’t think Jeff knows either of us by name, but he’d probably recognize a picture. Or a description.”
“Good.” Marc stepped back from the Dumpster and from Kevin, gesturing toward the end of the al ey. “Let’s go find out what the pip-squeak saw yesterday.”
I stood between Marc and Kevin in the foyer of Forbidden Fruit, bathing in the cool current of air flowing from the vent overhead. The artificial gust was quickly turning the sweat dripping down my spine into ice-cold rivulets, a transformation I welcomed.
We’d had to walk around to the front door in the one-hundred-three-degree heat, made worse by relative humidity hovering around the ninety percent mark. Luckily, the front door was unlocked, probably because the employees couldn’t get in through the back door, either.
The interior of the strip club was visible through a wide archway, and the sticky vinyl floor, collection of cheap tables, and room-length bar were pretty much what I’d expected—minus the naked women. The club wouldn’t actual y open for ten more minutes, so the elevated dance platform was dark and empty. Thank goodness. The last thing our farce of an investigation needed was Kevin in a hormone-induced moronic frenzy.
Though the dancers had yet to shake their well-proportioned hindquarters into action, Jeff and another, taller man in an identical hot-pink shirt were hard at work behind the bar, drying glasses and counting cash register drawers. And judging from the smell of fried food, someone was busy in the kitchen. The sign out front had advertised a lunch special of “hot wings and hot girls,” served with the drink of your choice.
And though my mouth felt dryer than a sand dune, the drink of my choice was any kind not served in the Forbidden Fruit.
As I watched Jeff-the-pip-squeak pour peanuts into a bowl on the bar, a short, busty woman walked past the foyer, barely dressed as a slutty version of Little Red Riding Hood. If she was looking for the Big Bad Wolf, she was out of luck.
“Sorry, boys, we’re not open yet,” Red said in a sultry Cajun accent, flashing a mouthful of small, bleached-white teeth at Kevin before she dismissed him entirely in favor of Marc. Only Marc. She hadn’t even glanced at me. Bitch.
“I hate to ask you to leave, sugar,” she said, batting her eyelashes at my boyfriend, her hands propped on the hips of a short, scarlet Lycra skirt. “But rules are rules. Come back in ten minutes, and I’ll give you a show. Then I’ll let you buy me a drink.” She cocked her head to the side and tapped her full lower lip with the end of one long red fingernail. “Oh, hell, I’ll buy you a drink.”
Marc stared down into her eyes, and his lips curved up in a slow, seductive smile. “As tempting as that sounds, I’m not here for pleasure.
Exclusively,” he added, as if it were an afterthought. “My friend’s here to see Jeff about a job.”
My chin dropped into the cradle of my cleavage. Seriously. I nearly dislocated my jaw. And, of course, Kevin snickered, knowing he was safe for the moment because Marc wouldn’t hit him in public. And because I stood between them.
“Your friend?” Little Red Riding Whore asked, her gaze sliding in my direction for the first time.
I snapped my jaw shut in a hurry and did my best to wipe the astonishment from my face. It went wil ingly, but anger swooped in to take its place. I was not applying for a job as a stripper. Not even to find out what happened to Robert Harper. And especially not in a club that couldn’t account for all of its employees.
My teeth ground together as Red’s eyes boldly roamed my body. I’d never been checked out by a woman before— that I knew of—and wasn’t sure how to respond gracefully. Or if I should even bother.
Finally, she nodded, apparently satisfied by my appearance.
“So glad I meet your approval,” I said, my voice thick with irony. Marc was the only one who caught my tone, and I was only sure about that because he kicked my sneaker when Red turned to glance over her shoulder at the bar.
“You shouldn’t have much trouble convincing him to give you a chance,” she said, turning back to look at Marc, though she spoke to me.
“We’re short-handed right now, anyway.”
“That’s right,” Marc said, as if he’d just remembered. “We saw the flyer about your missing dancer.” Taped to the front window were three more posters identical to the one on the back door.
“Yeah, that was weird,” Red said, her fake accent vanishing as genuine concern filled her eyes. Even her stance changed. She wrapped her arms around herself and bent one knee, balancing all of her weight on one red spiked heel.