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Malice In Miami (Jamie Quinn Cozy Mysteries Book 6)

Malice In Miami (Jamie Quinn Cozy Mysteries Book 6)

Book summary

In "Malice In Miami," family law attorney Jamie Quinn's life takes an unexpected turn when she's accused of art theft from a rare book collection, jeopardizing her dream job and law license. Her boyfriend, Kip, uncovers a dangerous secret as an environmental activist. With her favorite P.I. missing, Jamie must unravel the mystery to clear her name while keeping Kip safe.

Excerpt from Malice In Miami (Jamie Quinn Cozy Mysteries Book 6)

Chapter 1

"For God's sake, Kip, just admit it. You're an adrenaline junkie!"

"I knewyou'd say that." Kip laughed, beguiling me with his dimples. "Come on, Jamie, you act like I'm bungee jumping into the Grand Canyon. It's not that dangerous if you know what you're doing--"

"--Which you don't!" I pointed out. "Why do you torture me like this? Don't you love me?" I batted my eyes, exerting all of my feminine wiles, which only made him laugh again.

He glanced at the old-fashioned clock on the kitchen wall. "Better get going." Kip took a swig from his Save the Whales mug.

"Why, big plans today? Maybe wrestling an alligator naked?"

Choking on his coffee, Kip squeaked out "Which one of us is naked?"

"Who do you think?" I said, slamming the dishes into the dishwasher. I turned to face him, hands on my hips. "Let's recap, shall we? I wait months for you to come home from Australia--where all your love and devotion was lavished on wombats who didn't appreciate it--and now you spring this on me? This…this…craziness."

He stood up and stretched, still waking up. "Which is the crazy part, working nights?" he feigned innocence.

I shook my head, flummoxed by my tree-hugging boyfriend's bizarre behavior. "I never knew you had this blood-thirsty Rambo, Die Hard, Call of Duty side to you and it scares the hell out--"

Suddenly, Kip rushed me like a defensive tackle, pulled me into a hug and spun us around. He set me back on my feet and kissed me. I ruffled his hair affectionately, locking my arms behind his back and squeezing as hard as I could.

"Are you taking me prisoner?" he teased.

"No. I'm showing you what you signed up for." Then I gave him a nip on his bare shoulder.

"Ow! Is this what girlfriends do now?"

"No," I said. "It's what pythons in the Everglades do. You'd better get used to it."

***

An hour later, Kip waved good-bye as he backed his Chevy Volt out of my driveway. Still in pajamas I returned the wave from the front stoop muttering, "This isn't over yet, buddy". Then I went back inside to start my morning routine: feed Mr. Paws his stinky food, scrub the coffee pot, etc. My body was on autopilot as my mind worked overtime. It was hard to believe that only a month before I had been dying for Kip to come home, praying my dad would get his visa, and deciding what I wanted to do with my life (if I could quit family law, all options were on the table). Now I had everything I wanted but was feeling stressed out. It wasn't supposed to be like this. Although I was thrilled to have Kip and my dad home and I couldn't wait to start my new gig as trustee for The Andrea Lowenthal Art Fund, nothing was going as planned. Let's just say there were a few issues, a couple of complications, and some major headaches. All I wanted was one day without a crisis, was that so much to ask?

In response to my rhetorical question the phone rang. I held my breath as I answered it.

"How bad is he today?" I asked.

"Oh, mi amor," Ana Maria whispered, voice fraught with emotion, "I think you should come see for yourself."

Chapter Two

I was so anxious to see my dad it was a miracle I didn't have an accident on the way. Although it's a straight shot down Federal Highway from Hollywood to the city of Hallandale and traffic was light, the twenty minute drive seemed unbearably long. All I wanted was to be by his side. I knew I couldn't make up for the time we had lost but I didn't want to waste a minute of what we had left. As a lawyer who relied on words for a living I knew their power to persuade, incite, or heal--but how would I find the right words to help him? This was the most important case I'd ever argue, yet I had no memorandum of law, no precedent to back me up. I was working blind, a magician conjuring spells from thin air.

Golden Beach Towers was a fifty-five and over community overlooking the Intracoastal Waterway and not nearly as luxurious as it sounded. In fact, it was a faded ten-story building in need of repairs with no gold and no beach. I parked my Mini Cooper in a guest spot to appease the condo commandos spying on me from their breakfast nooks. As self-appointed watchmen they lived to catch scofflaws tossing boxes into the dumpster or snagging a reserved parking space. Their motto was: We don't like you either.

Riding the slow, creaky elevator to the seventh floor I braced for the worst. Selfishly, I wondered why every crisis had to happen so damn early. There was a reason I avoided morning hearings and morning appointments--I hated morning. My brain refused to engage before ten a.m. no matter how many shots of espresso I downed. I was much sharper at noon. Or at midnight.

When the elevator door opened I saw Ana Maria pacing the hallway. It still amazed me how she had been the key to finding my father--and how without my friend Grace's intervention we never would have met. Had I seen Ana Maria around town we would have smiled politely like the strangers we were and kept on walking. How was I to know she was my step-mom? I didn't even know my dad's real name back then. Life was funny that way. What wasn't funny was what Ana Maria was currently dealing with. She had sacrificed so much for my dad and now that he was finally here her life was no better.

She wasn't dressed for work, a bad sign, and the closer I got the more haggard she looked. It wasn't just the lack of make-up--no, the poor woman was exhausted. Her wheat-blond hair, usually so fluffy, lay flat on her head, as if staging a protest, and the bags under her eyes could qualify as carry-on. She rallied when she saw me. After planting the requisite peck on each cheek Ana Maria rested her hands on my shoulders like an unsteady dance partner and gazed up, her dark eyes misty.

"Thank you for coming, Jamie. You're a wonderful daughter."

"You don't have to thank me," I said, a little teary-eyed myself. "I'll always come. Does he know I'm here?"

"Yes, he's waiting for you." Her kind face was creased with worry. "He says it's urgent, that he must speak with you right away."

"Did he say why?" I asked before she opened the door.

Ana Maria didn't reply as she led me into their apartment and gestured towards my dad in the bedroom. I'm not sure what I expected, maybe that he would be under the covers in the fetal position. Isn't that what depressed people usually did? On the contrary, he was a whirlwind of activity. As the TV in the living room blared out the local news and the laptop on the dining table bellowed out a different story he was frenetically pulling clothes from the closet and tossing them on the bed. He was clad in a white t-shirt dribbled with coffee stains, rumpled shorts, one sock, and a toothbrush tucked behind his ear like a pencil, an alarming ensemble to say the least. I walked over to the laptop, closing the lid to silence it, and then picked up the remote and pushed the mute button.

"Hola Papi," I said, walking into the bedroom. "Planning a trip?"

He stopped yanking clothes off hangers and turned as if he'd just realized I was there. His relief was palpable.

"Jamie, my only child, thank God you're here! What if I never saw you again?"

He pulled me into a hug that was a little too tight. With my face squished against his chest I discerned that the coffee stain was fresh. If nobody was going to offer me a cup, at least I had the fumes.

I gently disengaged. "Why all the melodrama?" I joked, studying his worried face for clues. "Are you still having nightmares?"

Ana Maria had told me that since returning to the U.S. he had been having flashbacks to his first visit thirty-five years earlier. I guess being arrested and deported tends to stick with you--especially when you wind up at Gitmo. He sat on the edge of the bed, no longer manic, body slumped in defeat. I sat down beside him and put my arm around his lean shoulders.

"Talk to me," I said, "maybe I can help. I'm smart, you know. They say I take after my dad."

With a low chuckle, he raised his silver head with its untamable hair so like my own. "Don't you believe it," he said. "Your mother was the genius. But I know one thing." His eyes crinkled at the corners as he touched my cheek.

"What?" I played along.

"You got your good looks from your papa."

I laughed, as did Ana Maria, hovering in the doorway. "I can't argue with that," I said. "So, what's going on here?" I fell backwards onto the pile of clothes, arms spread wide like I was making a snow angel.

He jumped up from the bed, agitated once more. "I have to be ready, Jamie," he said, his voice cracking. "They're coming for me and there's nowhere to hide."

Chapter Three

"Who's coming for you?" I asked sotto voce, hoping to soothe my father's imaginary fears.

Eyes wide with panic, he shouted "They're everywhere, Jamie, no one is safe!"

Ana Maria gave me a concerned look and went to comfort her husband. As a divorce lawyer for many years, I was good at talking clients off the ledge, metaphorically speaking. Some of my clients had legitimate fears and others were completely irrational, but when they had a meltdown there was no telling them apart. Whatever their issue, it was real to them and you had to play along. There was no secret formula or complex algorithm for solving the problem because logic played no part. The key was to keep talking until something clicked in their brain and they stepped away from the ledge.

"Humor me, Papi," I said, reaching out from my nest of rumpled clothes to squeeze his rough hand. "I have no clue what you're talking about. But I wish I did."

He sat back down on the edge of the bed and hunched over, head bent toward his knees, the emergency crash position every airline promises will save us from a fiery death. No wonder nobody paid attention to the flight attendant anymore. If we're going down in flames we would spend our last few minutes reclining, listening to Beyoncé, thank you very much.

After several long minutes my dad raised his head, gave me a tortured look, and then uttered a word that spoke volumes.

"ICE."

Only someone living in a cave wouldn't know what he meant. ICE, the Department of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, was the cause of nationwide protests. Besides tearing families apart at the southern border, ICE officers were deporting undocumented immigrants who already lived here. Just speaking a foreign language could subject a person to attacks from people who blamed immigrants for their problems. The truth was, immigrants contributed to the economy, but facts didn't matter in this new alternate reality.

"I understand," I said, "These are scary times. But why are you concerned? You're here legally. You were sponsored by your adoring American daughter and followed all the rules to enter the country. Your lovely wife is a citizen too." I smiled at Ana Maria who blew me a kiss. "So what's the problem?"

My father shook his head sorrowfully as if I couldn't possibly understand. "They're raiding Greyhound buses, pulling people off."

I made him look at me. "Listen, under the Fourth Amendment those agents have no right to bother people riding the bus, but Papi--" I paused, curious.

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