I didn’t see myself as comic relief. “What would you have done?”
Carmen pulled the bobby pins from her hair. “Not gone into the river. I can’t imagine what that would’ve done to my clothes. But then again, you being a guy.”
“Let’s stick to the case,” I said. “Suppose Goodman did kill Marissa. Why?”
“That I think I can answer. I made a detour to Marissa’s office in Minneapolis. She was a PI, remember? Her office had been ransacked but I did find her sister. She told me-under hypnosis, because I didn’t want her to remember that I’d been there-that Marissa had been hired to find a missing woman, Naomi Peyton, and followed a lead to Key West.”
“And this Naomi Peyton is connected to Goodman?”
“We don’t know yet.” Carmen dug her fingers under the cap of stiff hair, like she was working a shingle loose. “There are a lot of loose threads here. You said Vanessa’s and Janice’s bodies were missing from the morgue in the hangar. Yet the officials said they were dead, though your friend…” Carmen glanced at me.
“Her name was Karen Beck.”
Carmen continued, “Karen said Vanessa and Janice never boarded the airliner.”
All this information was a pile of facts I couldn’t quite fit together.
Carmen scratched her scalp. She closed her eyes and a pensive expression settled over her face. “Goodman went to Chicago the day before the crash as a consultant with RKW for the feds. So either it’s a coincidence that he was there or Goodman’s a psychic or…” Carmen let the thought drift.
Or, or…what?
She wiped the flakes of dried hair gel from her fingertips. “How many people were on that commuter airliner?”
“Nineteen, including the crew of three.” I remembered the pictures of the dead inside the trailer.
“Maybe,” Carmen let a talon sprout from one index finger and used the point to clean her other fingernails, “what Gilbert Odin said about saving the Earth women is not about them getting killed but about something else entirely. Think about it. Vanessa and Janice are missing. As is Naomi Peyton.”
“Meaning they’re not dead?”
“That’s what we want to find out. The mysterious aspect about Naomi was that her car went off the road, killing her husband. And she’s missing.”
“Sounds like a wife who got tired of her husband,” I said.
“Felix, if it were that easy, why are we going in circles?” Carmen asked. “Marissa discovers a lead on Naomi that takes her to Key West and the next thing we know, she’s dead from a blaster wound.”
Carmen reached into her bra and pulled out a folded slip of paper. “Here’s Marissa’s cell phone number. Can you access her phone records?”
I took the paper and read the number. It had a 612 area code. “Consider it done.”
Carmen winked. “And you didn’t want me for a partner.”
“That’s three missing that we know of,” I said. “Naomi from a car crash. Vanessa and Janice when the commuter airliner went down.”
“Then where did they go?” Carmen asked. “And why would the officials lie about them? Don’t forget the other plane wreck. How many of those passengers aren’t dead but alive and missing?”
Trying to understand this case was like kneading a ball of hard clay. My brain started to cramp from the effort. I leaned against the bureau and rubbed my fingers against my forehead. “Was their disappearance a kidnapping? If so, could that justify the murder of all those people?”
“Maybe it’s the stakes involved?” Carmen lay on the bedcover and looked at the ceiling. “Notice that Odin said ‘Earth women,’ not simply ‘women.’ And he is an alien.”
“Was an alien,” I corrected. “He’s in the past tense, remember?”
“Is that the clue? That Odin was an alien? He was killed with a blaster.”
I caught on to Carmen’s reasoning. “Let’s accept that Goodman was Odin’s assassin. Goodman used a blaster to kill an alien. Why not shoot him with a regular pistol?”
Carmen sat up and looked at me. “Could it be that Goodman is an alien as well?” Her eyes sparkled with renewed insight.
“I don’t think so. Odin referred to him as a man.”
Carmen slumped her shoulders in disappointment.
I asked, “Did you ask your chalice about the ray gun?”
“I did. Under hypnosis, to keep the question a deep secret. But…” Carmen finished the thought by shaking her head.
“What about the ‘Earth women’? Is this a plot to kidnap them?” I asked. “All of them? Or just a few?”
Carmen added another question. “And why?”
I told her about the secret annex behind the main hotel and how the GPS disabled my golf cart. I described the annex, its array of NASA-style antennas, and the arrival of a military helicopter.
“What kind of a compound is it?” Carmen asked. “If it’s so secret, why build it behind the hotel?” Her aura glowed a bit warmer, the psychic equivalent of a wry smile. “Well then, Mister PI, what about this? I know why you’re in this motel and not the Sapphire Grand Atlantic. Ever hear of the G8?”
I answered, “That’s the Group of Eight, right? The organization of the eight richest industrialized nations.”
Carmen nodded. “Depends on who you listen to, the G8 is the world leaders either discussing how to solve the world’s problems or scheming how to make themselves and their cronies masters of the planet.”
“What’s the G8 got to do with me being in this motel?”
Carmen raised a finger. “One of the G8 study groups is holding a conference at the Grand Atlantic.”
“What study group?”
“The Markov PharmacoEconomic Study Group. They advise the G8 on medical developments and global health care.”
I remembered being turned away from the resort. “Security seemed pretty tight for a bunch of eggheads meeting to talk about vaccines and Band-Aids. Would Goodman have anything to do with them?”
“I’m ahead of you, Felix.” Carmen reached back into her tote bag and tossed a plastic card at me. “This is your pass for tonight’s party.”
The card looked like a standard-issue ID. It had my name, photo, a bar code, magnetic strip, and an iridescent stamp. “Where did this come from?”
Carmen shook her head. “Are you asking me that question?”
“All right. What party?”
“At the Grand Atlantic, what other?” Carmen produced a pair of envelopes in her hand, like a card trick. “You and I are guests of the G8 Markov PharmacoEconomic Study Group.”
Carmen scooted back on the mattress. “Now we better get ready.” She hitched her skirt and slip over her hips and peeled the stockings off her legs.
I did notice something, rather the absence of something. “What happened to your tattoo?” Carmen, always in orbit, once had a Star Trek insignia tattooed below her navel.
“Star Trek got so damned politically correct that they pissed me off. So I lasered the tattoo away in protest.”
Carmen rolled across the bed and reached into her tote bag. She pulled out a pair of strappy, golden, stiletto-heeled sandals and a tiny black bundle the size of her palm.
“Let me show you what I brought for the party.” Carmen shook the bundle and it unfolded into a cocktail dress. She fluffed the dress and it hung from her arm perfect and free of creases. “This is my little black number.”
“It’ll look stunning, Carmen.”
“No. On me it’ll look positively deadly.”