mother or his aunt?"
"Exactly!"
"Let's check him out anyway," Nina said diplomatically.
"We should rule him out together. A unanimous decision, since we are a t-e-a-m."
"Go team," April said. "I could hardly drink the coffee after our discussion of Arsenic Anna and rat poison."
"Britt and I are becoming close friends," Nina said. "I shouldn't even be suspecting her."
"The coffee was fine," Gretchen said. "It came out of one carafe."
"That was smart thinking," April said.
"There's so much to learn about detecting," Nina said.
"Live and learn," April said.
"I think you mean," Gretchen said, "learn and live."
* 32 *
They should have saved the mission to Ryan's house for another day. "Look at the commotion," April said.
"Keep going right past," Gretchen said to Nina from the backseat. From now on, she was going to drive herself. She felt trapped in her aunt's car.
A police officer tried impatiently to wave them past when Nina slowed down. "I said, keep going," Gretchen repeated, raising her voice. Matt Albright's unmarked blue car was parked at the curb. She saw Detective Brandon Kline standing on the broken-down porch talking to a cop. Brandon turned and shouted something to the officer near their car. The cop gave way, and motioned them to pull over.
Nina followed his direction. Gretchen moaned.
"The cops are searching Ryan's pad," April said, breaking into her version of street talk. "Look at all those strungout crackheads." She pointed to a pathetic group of five huddled at the corner of the house. They were in varying degrees of undress. Only one wore a shirt, all were barefoot, and if the others hadn't been bare-chested, Gretchen wouldn't have been able to figure out which were males. The one wearing the shirt was still an unknown as far as sexual persuasion went.
Gretchen slunk down in the backseat and crawled onto her stomach. The dogs, always ready for a ripping good time, used her as a runway. Tiny, sharp claws raked her back as they ran back and forth.
"What are you doing?" Nina said with more than a hint of disbelief in her tone.
"Hiding."
"I can see that. But from whom?"
"I vowed never to have anything to do with that womanizer again. If you had driven by when I asked you to, I wouldn't be flat on the seat with little nails piercing my skin. I'll be able to wear studs in the holes by the time they're done with me."
Okay. Gretchen was pretty sure she was acting immature. That's precisely what the detective did to her and why she was avoiding him. When was the last time she hid out in a car? She remembered exactly when--fourteen years ago--her sophomore year in high school, right before Eddie Bremen caught her with another guy. She'd tried to break it off, but he wouldn't take no for an answer, so she had ducked down to protect her date. It hadn't worked. Eddie Bremen had really clobbered her date. Slinking was justified that time, and it was justified this time. Hopefully, she'd have better luck than last time.
"What brings the pleasure of your company?" she heard Matt say right next to the car door. "And why is Gretchen hiding in the backseat?"
April giggled.
Gretchen shot up. "I wasn't hiding. I was looking for my . . . uh . . . contact. It jumped out of my eye."
She didn't even wear contacts, but he couldn't possibly know that.
"I'll help you." Matt opened the back door and carefully edged in, his eyes on her instead of on the floor. "I lose mine every once in awhile. It's a real pain."
"I found it!" Gretchen exclaimed, pretending to cup the lens between her hands. "Give me some room, and I'll plunk it back in. You have more important things to do."
Brandon Kline came up behind them. "We haven't found a thing. Not so much as a roach clip or dope pipe. The place is squeaky clean."
Matt shook his head. "Impossible."
"They insist this is a rehab house. Junior over there . . ."
He pointed at the ragged group, "claims he's the sponsor."
"Let's make him prove ownership," Matt said.
Brandon's gaze settled on Nina. He smiled.
Nina batted her eyes. "I should do a reading for you as soon as you wrap up this case," she said. Gretchen would have to teach Nina the finer points of conversing with the opposite sex. I should do a reading? What an awful pickup line.
"I'd like that," he said, sounding like he meant it. Nina eyed up his back end as he moved through the police