“You did your SEAL training out here,” Beth said, holding a bunch of grapes in her lap.
“Not in Beverly Hills.”
She rolled her eyes. “I know not in Beverly Hills.”
“I don’t scare you, do I?”
“What?”
He grinned and helped himself to a strawberry. “Never mind. I trained down the road on Coronado. What’re you two doing today?”
“Hannah’s studying this morning,” Beth said. “I’ll hang out here. Then we’re doing a ladies’ lunch at the Beverly Hills Hotel. You’re welcome to join us.”
“I’m not a lady.”
Another roll of the eyes. Grit figured Beth Harper deserved sunlight, warmth and time away from Vermont, given the stresses of the past winter. She’d been on the search team that had hiked up the remote north side of Cameron Mountain when one of Lowell Whittaker’s paid killers had pinned down Jo, Elijah, Hannah’s brother Devin and another teenager—the stepdaughter of a murdered ambassador—in a tiny cabin.
By the time Beth arrived, the killer, a brutal type named Kyle Rigby, was dead. Elijah had shot him while Jo provided cover from the cabin and kept the two teenagers alive.
Trooper Thorne had been on the team that morning.
Beth was the second daughter of a Black Falls retired police chief, one of the co-owners of Three Sisters Cafe and, from what Grit had seen during his days in Black Falls, close to her firefighter brother and federal agent sister. But right now, Beth looked very alone to him.
Hannah gave Grit a bright smile. “What are you doing today?”
“I have a few errands to run before I head to Coronado. Should be interesting. I haven’t been this far from my physical therapist since they wheeled me into Bethesda.”
Beth plucked a grape off her bunch and popped it in her mouth. “You’ll be fine.”
“You’re a hard-bitten Yankee woman, Beth Harper,” Grit teased her, good-humored, as he got to his feet.
“I was being encouraging.”
He laughed and headed back inside. It was a nice house. Generally it took a lot for him to notice such things. He was digging out his phone to call a cab when Beth appeared at his elbow. “Sean’s loaned me a car,” she said. “I can take you where you want to go.”
“What about your ladies’ lunch?”
“Hannah said she can use the extra study time. We’ll go tomorrow.”
“You could just give me the keys,” Grit said.
“Nope. Can’t. The idea of driving the streets of Beverly Hills with a disabled Navy SEAL scares the hell out of me.”
“No, it doesn’t. You’re looking for distractions. In my experience, that, combined with car keys, is a recipe for problems.”
“Add jet lag and unfamiliar roads and it all cancels out,” Beth said. “I’ll have to concentrate.”
Who was he to argue with such logic?
Grit followed Beth to the garage and took the passenger seat of an expensive sedan while she got behind the wheel and snapped on her seat belt. He thought about getting her to talk about Rose Cameron, but she hadn’t been kidding about the jet lag and unfamiliar roads. Even after a week in Southern California, she said, she wasn’t used to the three-hour time difference. He had a feeling she just didn’t want to admit she’d been sleeping badly since Trooper Thorne had gone back to Vermont early.
“Didn’t you think Beverly Hills would be flatter?” she asked as she careened around a sharp, downhill curve.
“No. It’s got ‘hills’ in the name.”
“There are hills and there are hills. Where are we going?”
Grit checked the directions Charlie had obsessively provided. “Two lefts and a right.”
They came to a square, three-story stucco apartment building off Wilshire. Beth pulled into a small parking area out back. Grit got out. His left leg was doing better after his flight but still ached. He had instructions from PT on what to do about any kind of discomfort, rash or swelling that flared up.
“You can wait here,” he said to Beth.
“I get bored fast.” She pushed open her door and got out. “Who are we going to see—some SEAL buddy of yours?”
He glanced back at her. He really should have told her to keep her lunch date with Hannah. She didn’t need to be with him. “An actor,” he said. “A friend of a friend.”
She looked skeptical. From what he’d seen of her, she had good instincts about people, undoubtedly including him. Her big sister, Jo, was the same, although Charlie had gotten the better of her with his prank last fall.
Then again, Charlie got the better of most people.
Grit went ahead of Beth to a rear apartment on the corner of the first floor. A little hybrid car was in what appeared to be the apartment’s designated parking space. On the cracked concrete landing, a basket with dried-up red flowers poking out of it hung from a hook.
“Is that a flower that needs a lot of water?” he asked Beth.
“How would I know? I’m a paramedic.”
“That doesn’t mean you don’t know flowers.”
“They’re red,” she said. “They look like they need more water than they’ve been getting.”
He glanced back at her. “You’re not going to be much help, are you?”
She didn’t answer. He stepped onto the landing and reached to press the rusted doorbell, but Beth grabbed his arm.
He knew why. He’d smelled it, too. It wasn’t strong, but he recognized the sickly, tangy-sweet smell of rotting human flesh.
“Call 911,” Beth said. “Someone’s dead in there.”
“You call.” Grit turned to her, serious now. “Okay? Do it now.”
He tried the doorknob. The door was unlocked. He heard Beth’s sharp breath behind him but ignored her and went in.
A woman lay sprawled on her back on the kitchen floor. She was young, about five-four, with wide hips and a flat stomach and long, straight hair as black as Grit’s.
She’d been dead for some time, at least a couple of days.
“Looks like she was electrocuted,” Beth said, tight. “See her hands? Burned.”
Grit pointed at a stainless-steel electric kettle turned over on the tile floor by the counter. Bare wires poked out of the bottom of the pot. “Well, well. Some son of a bitch stripped the wires, set them between the heating element and the pot…. She grabs the pot for a nice cup of tea and she’s toast.”
“Literally.” Beth was grim as she nodded to a sponge mop standing in a bucket of water. “She’d been cleaning the floors, too. Water and electricity don’t mix.”
Not an accident, Grit thought.
Beth called 911, identified herself and calmly, professionally described the emergency, but when Grit started into the adjoining living room, she waved frantically at him. He ignored her. They’d already contaminated the crime scene, and how did they know there wasn’t another victim—someone who might be alive and need their help?
No one was in the living room. Grit ducked down a short hall and checked the one bedroom and bathroom, then returned to the living room and checked the door there, which led to a hall and the building’s front entrance.
There were no other victims and no obvious signs of an intruder.
The apartment wasn’t neat. It was decorated with white shag carpets and bright, cheap artwork, with a state-of-the-art media setup.
The dead woman hadn’t gotten far with her cleaning. Grit considered that she might not be an outside housekeeper. Maybe she was bunking in with Trent and it had just been her turn with the mop.
So where was he?
A corkboard above the dining table was covered with photos of a very good-looking, fair-haired man in his