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Not One Clue_ A Mystery Part 12

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We kept walking, and though I didn't turn toward Aalia, I could feel her falter.

"Aalia."

"Yes?" Her shoulders were still pulled back and somehow she had learned to lead with her hips, but her pace had slowed the slightest degree, and her voice sounded vague.

"Do you know what a lesbian is?"

"In my country they are put to the death."



"In mine, they get their own talk shows."

She shook her head, but her attention was on the suits. "It is a mortal sin."

"We kind of frown on wife-beating here," I said.

A degree of color seeped from her face. Then, reaching out, she took my fingers in hers. They felt as cold as Popsicles. Our gazes met and stuck. I swung our hands between us and forced a smile. It took her a moment to reciprocate, but when she did the world lit up like a carnival. Just when we were even with the suits, she leaned over and kissed me.

I stared, agog, and she laughed. Slipping her arm through mine, she toted me outside.

"Give me the keys."

I jerked toward the speaker. Rivera was right beside me, face hard, body language unspeakable. I hadn't even heard him approach, but he was matching my stride.

"The keys," he said again.

"I can drive," I said.

"She needs you."

"She's fine ... and amazing," I said, but he was already slipping my purse from my shoulder.

"Hurry up," he ordered, and it wasn't until that moment that I realized Aalia was crying.

11.

It is better to be a coward for a moment than to be dead for the rest of your life.-Irish proverb Even though the traffic was atypically light, it was still a long ride home from LAX to Sunland. I sat in the backseat with Aalia. For the first few miles I just stared out the back window, but if anyone was following us, I couldn't see them.

I was able to coax almost nothing out of Aaila. In the end, she fell asleep, head resting against the cus.h.i.+on behind her. I tried to call her sister, but my message went instantly to voice mail.

By the time we reached the 101 I had given up, but Ramla was out her door before Rivera had pulled the Saturn to a complete halt. Instead of rus.h.i.+ng toward us, however, she stood absolutely still, waiting on her stoop, hands clasped in front of her mouth, brows drawn painfully together in the sweep of her porch light.

Rivera turned off the car and glanced back at me. Aalia came awake slowly and blinked, then started slightly as she saw us staring at her.

"It's okay," Rivera said.

"We're here," I intoned, and nodded toward the Al-Sadrs'. "Your sister's waiting."

Aalia lifted her beautiful face toward my neighbor's house. "Ramla?" She said the word strangely, almost like a prayer, and then she was fumbling for the door handle. Ramla was running toward us. I sat perfectly still, watching as the two women met and clasped, cried and hugged and cried some more. Sitting in the backseat, I felt my eyes well up as Ramla and Aalia turned, still hugging, toward the house. One hot, fat tear slipped down my cheek.

The night went silent. Even Rivera seemed beyond complaints.

"I'd join you back there," he said, "but I'm probably in enough trouble for hara.s.sing strangers without being found in the backseat with a weeping woman."

"I'm not weeping," I said, and inconspicuously wiped away the tear.

It was very dark, but I could still make out his cut-granite features in the dimness. "Is that an invitation?"

"No," I said, but truth to tell, I did kind of need a hug ... or something.

"You okay?"

"Sure," I said. "It was easy peasy."

He raised one brow. "You dressed a Muslim woman in a garbage bag."

I sniffed a little. "There were Muslim men nearby."

He nodded.

"I'm getting a kink in my neck," he said, twisted around in the seat. "We should get you inside."

I didn't say anything. The memory of Ramla wrapping her sister in her arms still made my throat feel tight.

"Or I could join you back there."

"Geez," I said, and shedding the melancholy mood, clambered out of the car. He followed me to the door, where I put my key in the lock.

"I'll call you in the morning," he said.

I turned toward him. "You're not coming in?"

"I've got some things to take care of," he said.

I winced despite myself, remembering the part about Aalia's missing pa.s.sport, my lies lies regarding Aalia's nonexistent pa.s.sport, and the fact that Rivera probably knew all along I was lying. "Any of those things going to get me incarcerated?" regarding Aalia's nonexistent pa.s.sport, and the fact that Rivera probably knew all along I was lying. "Any of those things going to get me incarcerated?"

He glanced at me. "Would it matter?"

"What are you talking about?"

"You might enjoy the company in Sing Sing."

I gave him a look that may have suggested I thought he'd lost his last vestige of good sense.

"But maybe they don't kiss as well as Aalia."

I felt myself blush. "That wasn't my idea," I said, and he laughed as he stepped up on the stoop and slipped an arm around my waist.

"So you think you'd prefer the companions.h.i.+p in Lompoc?"

"I don't know what you're talking about."

His mouth was still slanted up at a c.o.c.ky angle. "Looks like n.o.body n.o.body can resist you," he said. can resist you," he said.

I considered pus.h.i.+ng him away, but didn't really want to. "You're doing okay."

He snorted and slipped a loose lock of hair behind my right ear. "She even got in your backseat before I did."

"There was no tongue," I said.

"Jesus, McMullen," he said, and pulled me closer. "I'm having a hard enough time remembering you two kissing without thinking about ..." The length of him felt hard against my thigh. He s.h.i.+fted uncomfortably. "Jesus."

"So you're one of those those guys," I said. guys," I said.

His eyes were like dynamite. "One of those guys who wants to screw you?"

I swallowed. "One of those guys who gets turned on by the thought of two women together."

"Oh, you mean a guy with b.a.l.l.s. Yeah," he said, "I am. But I'm not sure mine are as big as yours."

"What are you talking about?"

He shook his head. "Sometimes I don't really know if you're gutsy or just stupid."

"Gutsy," I said.

He chuckled a little and touched my cheek. "What the h.e.l.l were you thinking?"

The events of the evening were beginning to take their toll. The palms of my hands suddenly felt sweaty. "Do you think they'll figure out where she's at?"

His eyes were dark and seemed to be whispering s.e.xy secrets about abandoned beaches and breakfast a la him. "There's no way to be sure if they were even after her."

"They checked all the bathroom stalls."

His fingers paused on my cheek. "What's that?"

I swallowed. I felt a little shaky suddenly. "They came into the restroom and checked all the stalls."

"Muslim men went into the women's bathroom?"

"Um ... no."

He swore, but it was quiet, so I wasn't too concerned.

"I didn't make make her go in the men's," I told him. her go in the men's," I told him.

He shook his head. "You are something else, woman."

"In a good way?" I asked. "Or in a way that'll get me five to ten."

"That's yet to be determined," he said, and slipped his hand lower.

"What determines it?"

He shrugged. "Care to bribe an officer of the law? I think the backseat's still empty."

I laughed a little. "I think the Middle Eastern guys were shocked enough."

"After that kiss, they're probably home beating off right now."

"Is that what you plan to do?"

His lips. .h.i.tched up a notch. "I've still got hope here."

"No, you don't," I said, but my voice was kind of squishy.

He chuckled, low and hot. Then he leaned closer. All my juices rushed to the forefront. All my inhibitions swooshed away like rain down a storm drain, but he reached around me and opened the door.

I scowled. He nodded me inside, so I stepped in, and he followed.

"Elaine." He called her name and she was there immediately, eyeing me, eyeing him.

"What happened?" She was wiping her hands on a towel. A frown had dared venture onto her perfect brow.

"I want you to make sure McMullen doesn't leave the house tonight," he said.

"Okay."

"If someone comes to the door, call me immediately."

She nodded.

"If you hear a strange noise, call me immediately."

"All right."

"If you're nervous-"

"Call you? Immediately?"

"Right."

Reaching out, she pulled me farther into the vestibule. Rivera turned, closing the door behind us, leaving us alone.

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About Not One Clue_ A Mystery Part 12 novel

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