Showing posts with label Inappropriate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Inappropriate. Show all posts

Saturday, October 12, 2024

INAPPROPRIATE

 


Excerpt from INAPPROPRIATE by Sherry Morris

I hate discovering dead bodies. 

Sandra Faire wiggled her fingers into a pair of purple nitrile gloves.  Fear crept up her spine as a fishy dead-human stench wafted through the dawn. Waves slapped a creepy cadence.

She tread softly through the sand to a bloated young black man clad in a dress-blue United States Navy uniform.  “Sir, do you need some assistance?”  Please roll over and puke or something.  “Hey buddy you okay?”  Nothing.  She gave him a little nudge in the ribs with her sneaker.  He felt squishy.  She shuddered and hugged herself. 

The sun rose pink on the horizon.  Red sky was good luck for sailors or something like that.  Not for this guy. 

This is so not the way I want to begin my last shift before vacation. 

Sandra unfastened the gold button on his wool collar and placed two of her fingers on his carotid artery.  No pulse.  He stared past her big brown eyes with long eyelashes frozen in a peaceful expression.  The curl of his lips looked as though he had been up to something mischievous.  She lowered her ear to listen for breathing as she studied his chest.  She didn’t see or feel respirations.  Up close he smelled like chlorine bleach.

Sandra wasn’t a coroner but it was obvious to her this guy had been dead for quite some time.

She struggled with the shrunken wet wool, peeling open more buttons on the overcoat.  She loosened his tie and then unbuttoned his white shirt exposing his hairy chest and a gold Star of David necklace.  She didn’t find the dog tags she was searching for.

“Rest in peace unknown sailor.”

She said a little prayer for him and pulled off the gloves as she hurried back to the golf cart.  She tossed them in the back with the trash, exhaled, flipped open her azure cell phone and punched nine on speed dial.  She glanced at her simulated diamond Tinker Bell watch and then wiggled her wrist to make the pixie dust dance under the crystal.

“Cocoa Beach Department of Public Works.  What is your complaint?” demanded Igor the dispatcher.

“It’s Sandra Faire.  I found a military floater washed up in front of the Copacabana.  He’s dead.”

Within ten minutes, Sandra was surrounded by three hotel security guys wearing gray trousers and blue blazers; Andres the perpetually hung-over lifeguard; Eagle, the hotshot volunteer beach patrolman who always startled the sunbathers by tearing around the sand in his ATV; Bicep Betty sporting the yellow polka dot bikini and matching support hose; six uniformed City of Cocoa Beach cops.  And Lieutenant Hottie DiMattina, homicide. 

Okay, so his first name was Frank and not that he was her type--anymore. But her temperature sure rose whenever he met her gaze.  She needed to redirect those misbehaving hormones.  Sandra was finished with uber-hot alpha males.  Especially this one.  No man of hers answered his cell phone during a romantic interlude.  Just because there was a category five hurricane looming, it was no excuse for him to run off to work and leave her panting on the kitchen table.

Well, yeah, there were some other issues.  Frank and Sandra weren’t compatible except when they were making out.  His kisses were addictive. His tongue infiltrated and conquered.  Perhaps it’s just as well the hurricane had interrupted them.  She had nothing to regret. 

They didn’t have anything in common.  She was eighteen the first time they kissed. And the last time. Now she was twenty-three and he was on the other side of thirty.  She didn’t like guys in law enforcement. Most of the cops in her family were manipulative peacocks with swagger.

Hottie was dressed in a black tee shirt--way too tight.  She could see the outline of his chiseled abs and the ripple of his deltoids.  He wore a badge on a chain around his neck, a service weapon and handcuffs tucked into the rear of his form fitting Levis.

The lieutenant studied the deceased as the tide lapped the sailor’s mucky dress shoes.  He paced off an area for the uniforms to seal the death investigation scene.  Hotel security assisted, thrusting hot pink umbrellas into the sand to wrap the yellow police tape around.

Forensics and the medical examiner arrived and got to work.  The lieutenant had a long conversation with the lifeguard then shook his head, scribbled on a notepad, ducked under the police tape and ambled to Sandra. 

She leaned casually against the umbrella rental booth, twisting an errant strand of ash blonde hair around a finger, determined not to allow his deep testosterone voice to move her. 

He looked down and rubbed his clean shaven chin.  His eyes lingered on the finer parts of her anatomy as his gaze climbed to her face and he asked, “You discover this one?”

Sandra sucked down a deep breath of humidity, trying not to remember his erotic whispers. 

“Did you discover the body?” he repeated.

She nodded.

“Anyone in the area at the time?”

She studied his dark coffee eyes, lingering in their mystique. She shook her head.

“How long ago?”

She checked Tinker Bell.  “About forty-five minutes now.  I called in the find at six-thirteen.”

“Did you notice any footprints around the body before you approached it?”  He cocked his head to one side and gave her sneakers the once over.

She kicked up one foot so he could see the treads.  “Sorry, I forgot to check…”

He frowned and gave her that you’ve disappointed me again look.  “Did you disturb anything?”

“I unbuttoned him with gloves on.  He was all buttoned up to his chin.  I felt his carotid artery.  I couldn’t find his dog tags.  Oh…and I kicked him in the ribs.”

“Left or right side?”

“Left.”

He scribbled on his note pad.  “Have you noticed anything out of the ordinary on the beach in the last twenty-four hours?”

She shook her head.  This was why she hated discovering dead bodies.  It forced her to collide with the most inappropriate man for her.  Sandra didn’t want things to get stirred up again.  She couldn’t get things stirred up again.  Because of what happened during the hurricane.

“Do you know him from anywhere?” he asked.

She shook her head again exaggeratedly slow with a wide-eyed expression.

“Thank you, Miss Faire.  I’ll be in touch.” He strutted over to the hotel security guards kibitzing near her golf cart. 

Sandra smoothed her bright white Department of Public Works tee shirt down over her red uniform shorts as she traipsed past them.  They were discussing the evangelical Christian service held last night inside the Copacabana ballroom.  Pastor Eugene Donaldson was a modern thinking feel-good preacher, very popular with the locals and tourists alike. He had led prayer breakfasts at the White House during both Slick Willie’s and Dub-yah’s terms.

Sandra chimed in, “The sailor was Jewish.  There is a Star of David around his neck.  He wouldn’t have attended.”

Frank rolled his eyes and glared at her. 

She hated when he did that.  Just because she wasn’t a cop didn’t mean she couldn’t solve crimes…or sort out which leads were dead ends.

She climbed back into the golf cart and waved to Andres, the lifeguard.  He smiled and waved back.  The guy was hot if you liked suntanned guitar playing Euro-blonds without muscles.  Sandra didn’t.  She didn’t like his sing-song German accent either.  And she especially didn’t like guitar players anymore…on account of Hurricane Alfredo.

She went on about her job puttering down the beach stopping to pick up a piece of petrified palm trunk, a glass grape juice bottle and a deflated football.  She plucked them with a mechanical snatcher device.  She didn’t know if it had an official name but she called hers Monkey.  After two years at this job she was pretty efficient.  She could do it all from the driver’s seat. 

The theme to “The Pink Panther” jazzed from her shorts.  She stopped and dug her phone out of her pocket.  Her mother’s picture was on the caller I.D.  She inhaled and answered, “Hi, Mom.”

“Sandra are you still intending to climb aboard that train of fools?”

“They aren’t fools Mom.  They’re very nice people.”

She sobbed, “You’re being kidnapped by that cult and I’ll never see my baby again.” She launched into one of her motherly speeches about how everything Sandra did was inappropriate. 

Sandra knew her mother was so disappointed in her.  Her four brothers were cops working under their dad, the police commissioner, but Sandra, her youngest child, toiled as a sanitation engineer and public relations specialist for the Department of Public Works.  Translation: she picked up the trash left on the beach and told the tourists where the public restrooms were located.  At least the uniform was cute.

What her mom didn’t know was by day Sandra collected garbage but by night she was an infamous cozy mystery author.  She wrote under the pen name of Dixie London.  And she didn’t have a thing published.  She had written almost twelve books…well the first three or four chapters of twelve different books.  Okay, so she was more like an infamous cozy mystery author wannabee.  But she had fun.  Sandra belonged to the Global Order of Scribes, pronounced “goose” for short. 

Rosemary Donaldson, wife of Evangelical Pastor Eugene Donaldson, was the president of her local chapter.  Sandra couldn’t stand her, the snobby fakey flake.  Rosemary arranged a little writers conference of sorts aboard three private railcars hooked onto the back of her husband’s crusade train, hooked onto the back of a regular North American Passenger Railway train. 

Of course Sandra could set her feelings for Rosemary aside and grace the authors with her presence long enough for a two week free vacation aboard the private rail cars.  The Donaldsons were wealthy so she knew this would be a first class to-do.  The Agatha Christie birthday shindigs she hosted at her mansion were always loaded with fat shrimp, alligator tar-tar and a white chocolate fountain.  Maids and cabbage roses everywhere you turned in her lavish residence.  Even the ceilings were painted with rose murals.  Last time Sandra tucked two pieces of Rosemary’s toilet paper into her pocket to show her mom.  It was printed in full color, embossed and scented with roses.  Mom wasn’t impressed.  She told Sandra it would cause bladder infections.

“Mom—Mom—Mom!”  Sandra finally got her to stop ranting.  “I told you it’s not a cult.  I’m not going as one of the devout followers of Pastor Donaldson.  Rosemary invited our mystery readers’ book club to tag along.  We’ll be segregated from the fanatics.  We have our own private cars and we’ll be reading and discussing books…and knitting.”

Her Mom loved knitting so she just threw that in.

“Really, knitting?”

“Un-hunh.  A couple of the ladies are involved in the knit-a-scarf-for-a-sailor charity.  We’ll be softly warming the brave necks of our men and women at war.” Sandra was great at making things up.

“Oh well why didn’t you tell me? What time do we leave? I’ll need to finish the laundry—“

“No!”  She cleared her throat.  “No, Mom.  You can’t go.  The train is already filled to capacity.  You needed to reserve a compartment ahead of time.”

“Nonsense.  I’ll bunk-in with you.”

“No can do.  I have a roommate.  Josephine.”

“Oh…Josephine.  How is she? Is her Aunt Beverly recuperating as well as can be expected?”

Josephine White was the only friend she had whom Mom approved of.

“Josephine and Aunt Beverly are doing just fine.  I’ll tell her you asked about them.  I gotta go, Mom.  Got to finish up by noon today.”

“Come see me before you leave.”

Yeah, right.  So you can jump in the backseat and stow away.  “I’ll try.  Gotta run.  Bye.”  Sandra closed her phone and stuffed it back inside her pocket.

She motored along the beach.  Two guys stumbled knee deep in the surf, fishing.  An early jogger trotted by.  Sandra smacked her forehead and lifted her foot off the gas.  If Lieutenant Hottie had any follow up questions for her she wouldn’t be available.  She should have told him she’d be departing on the GOOS Express.  Could this be a dilemma? He didn’t tell her not to leave town or anything.  And she had only discovered the body.  Sandra wasn’t technically a witness or suspect.  And besides it was just a routine death investigation.  She was confident the autopsy would show he had drowned.

Sandra deduced the sailor probably was on shore leave, rented a speed boat with his buddies, got drunk and fell overboard.  Yeah, that’s it.  He seemed really happy by the smirk frozen on his face.  I ought to open a detective agency.  And I could hire my writing pals as operatives.  An all woman force.  Nobody would suspect us of spying on them.  We’d make a killing.  She giggled at her pun.

Sandra peeked at Tinker Bell, shook up the pixie dust, looped around and did a U-turn.  It was time to stop by the dumpster and then check-in with Igor. 

A mob of tourists had congregated at the crime scene as the police carted off the corpse.  They were gobbling Krispy Kremes and sucking back Starbucks.  Sandra placed her hands on her hips and sighed.  More trash for her to collect later on.

She observed the lieutenant down along the shoreline, running his fingers through his short dark hair.  Perhaps I should advise him I’ll be leaving town.  Sandra decelerated and threw her hand up.  He didn’t notice so she kept going.  She decided to call him from the train.

Part of her was relieved not to have to talk to him face-to-face.  If Lieutenant Hottie were to make a late night visit to her little studio apartment--to discuss the case--she wouldn’t be home to answer the door wearing something entirely inappropriate.

* * * *

At exactly 1:47 P.M. Sandra checked-in at the Orlando North American Passenger Railway station and then dragged her huge navy blue rolling duffle bag outside.  Missing one wheel, it fought her the whole way.  She balanced a turquoise hard plastic cooler on top of it as she glanced around the platform. 

The crusaders sported primary and water colored leisure suits and church appropriate dresses.  The African, Asian and Cuban-Americans carried the style off well enough.  However, the European-Americans who had baked thousands of hours in the Florida sun resembled shriveled dates.

Rosemary Donaldson waved her down to the rear of the train.

Sandra’s tummy jittered with excitement.  And hunger.  She couldn’t wait to gobble the gourmet goodies.  She drew a deep breath and plodded through the throng of elderly passengers. 

“Hi, Rosemary.”

They fake kissed the humidity near both cheeks.  Sandra tried not to cough in the perfume haze engulfing the raven haired, liposuctioned, botoxed pastor’s wife dressed in white patent leather boots, striped over-the-knee socks, a ruffled plaid fuchsia miniskirt and an orange low-cut sweater.  Rosemary had the body for the outfit but at her age and considering her husband’s holy profession, jail bait tart was not a good look.

“We can board any minute now.  Here’s our itinerary,” Rosemary said, in her high-pitched nasally voice as she presented Sandra with a floral motif pocket folder.

Sandra released her luggage handle and accepted it.  The suitcase plopped down onto the concrete with a resonating thud.  The cooler’s lid didn’t dislodge, thank goodness. She squatted to pick them up.

 “Sandra, I’m so glad you talked your mother into joining us,” said Rosemary.

Sandra shut her eyes tight, scrunched up her face and clenched her fists, hoping she hadn’t heard correctly.  “Pardon? What did you say?”

“Your momma stopped by my house this morning with a trunk full of yarn and knitting needles.  She volunteered to teach the crusaders to knit.”

INAPPROPRIATE by Sherry Morris is Available at Amazon 

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