Look Again - Lisa Scottoline [78]
Ellen felt a twinge of conscience as she turned the corner, and as soon as she was out of sight, she broke into a light jog. She didn’t know how long Carol would be out front and she couldn’t blow this chance. It was almost too humid to breathe, and she was panting by the time she lapped the block and reached the intersection of Surfside Lane and the main drag, where she knelt next to a tall hedge, pretending to tie her sneaker.
Carol gardened at a leisurely pace, pulling the weeds and putting them in a neat pile on the left. A small plastic bag of peat moss and a large flat of yellow marigolds were sitting on the lawn next to the memorial, and a full sun bathed the front lawn. Ellen’s breathing returned to normal, but she was sweating behind her sunglasses, and Carol must have been feeling the same way, because in the next second, she took off her sunglasses and visor and set them down. Ellen flashed on the DNA list:
Hair with the follicle still attached.
She couldn’t be sure there would be a hair on the sunglasses or visor, and she wouldn’t get another chance, so she rejected the idea. She shifted her feet and fake-tied the other sneaker, watching as Carol moved to the marigold flat and twisted off a small packet of flowers. Ellen watched her from her crouching position, and Carol gentled the plant from the flat and set it on the ground. She reached into the gardener’s tote and pulled out a can of soda, then popped the tab, and took a sip.
Bingo!
Ellen scanned the block, and there was no one in sight. She slid the plastic glove from her other pocket, put it on her hand, and rose slowly. Then she slid her BlackBerry from her pocket and pressed the number for information in Miami. She asked for the Bravermans’ phone number, and while the call connected, she walked toward Carol, who was bent over her flowers, making a hole for the new marigolds with her fingers. The phone rang once in Ellen’s ear, then again, and in the next second, Carol looked up at her house.
Get the phone, Carol.
Ellen slid the paper bag from her pocket and started walking down Surfside Lane, keeping her gloved hand at her side, out of view. In the meantime, Carol was rising, taking off her gardening gloves on the fly, and hurrying toward the house.
Yes!
Ellen crossed to the Bravermans’ side of the street, her heart pounding. She hustled up the sidewalk, getting a bead on the soda can. There was nobody exercising or walking dogs, and she wouldn’t get another chance. She broke into a light run, the ringing cell phone to her ear. Ten feet away, then five, then right in front of the Braverman house. Carol’s soda was a Diet Sprite, sitting next to the tote.
Now, now, now!
She ran straight up the Bravermans’ lawn, swooped down with her gloved hand, grabbed the Diet Sprite and took off like a shot, running down the block. She turned the can upside down so the soda poured out, and she ran like she’d never run in her life. She tore around the block, bolted all the way to the main drag, then darted across the street.
HONK HONK! went a truck, skidding to a stop behind her.
Ellen tore open her car door, jumped in, and dumped the can in the brown paper bag. She twisted on the ignition, floored the gas pedal, and headed straight for the causeway. She felt like cheering. Wind off the causeway whipped her hair around, and she hit a red light, taking off the glove and leaving it on the seat, its purpose served. She took off her visor and sunglasses, relieved to finally shed her disguise. She caught a glimpse of the street sign and did a double take.
Charbonneau Drive?
The traffic light turned green, but instead of going straight over the causeway, she turned right onto the street.
Chapter Fifty-six
CHARBONNEAU DRIVE, read the street sign, and Ellen flashed on the dentist’s reminder from the Bravermans’ trash bag. She had known that Charbonneau sounded familiar, though she couldn’t remember how. She’d passed the street every time she’d driven back and forth to the causeway. Charbonneau Drive had to be connected to Carol Braverman.