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Finlay Donovan Knocks 'Em Dead(Finlay Donovan #2)(13)

Author:Elle Cosimano

My thoughts drifted to that stupid pink trowel above the workbench in my garage—the only tool Steven had bothered to leave on the pegboard when he’d moved out. I thought about all those empty pegs and dust-filled drawers. About the lengths Vero and I had gone to just to find a damn shovel to bury a body. Weaving between the throngs of shoppers, I began plucking one of everything off the rack: screwdrivers, hammers, tape measures, flashlights, and a collection of pliers in a variety of sizes, shapes, and colors. On second thought, maybe I’d keep the cordless drill for myself. I grabbed a mega-assortment pack of Duracells and dumped them in my cart.

Zach finished his Cheerios and started whining again. Thirty minutes had passed, and I was beginning to wonder where Vero had gone when her cart rounded the aisle and pulled up alongside mine.

“Look, Mommy!” Delia said, her feet swinging from the holes in the seat. “My teeth are loose. The tooth fairy’s going to come and give me lots of money.” Delia pushed her front teeth with the tip of her tongue. I squinted, leaning closer to see. They hardly wiggled.

“I don’t think those are quite ready to come out.”

“That’s why Vero got me one of these.” Delia brandished a pair of pliers. I snatched them before she could wedge them into her mouth, trading her for my iPhone and dumping the tool into Vero’s cart.

Vero smirked down at the contents of my basket. “Looks like someone went a little crazy with the batteries. I thought you said Julian was only gone for a week.” Her voice fell conspiratorially low. “If you need some power tools, Stacey down the street just started one of those home-based adult toy businesses. Free batteries with every purchase and they offer discreet shipping.”

A teenage store clerk paused his restocking to stare at us. My cheeks burned. “I don’t need those kinds of tools, thankyouverymuch.”

“I’ve seen the drawer in your nightstand, Finn, and I respectfully disagree.” The clerk’s eyes drew open wide. “What are you staring at?” she called out to him, drawing the attention of the other shoppers in the aisle.

When the last sets of curious eyes returned to their carts, I lowered my voice. “This has nothing to do with Julian. I’m just sick of seeing that empty pegboard every time I pull into the garage. There’s no reason I should have to rely on Steven or my dad every time something breaks.” Vero and I were perfectly capable of handling the occasional loose screw on our own. I reached for a double roll of duct tape and dropped it in her cart.

“Since you obviously didn’t get to play house with your boyfriend, how’d the writing go?”

My grunt was noncommittal. “I spent the entire weekend searching the forum for FedUp.”

“Any luck?”

“Not a bit.”

“Me either.”

I dragged my cart to a stop, grabbing Vero’s and forcing it to a halt. “You checked the forum from your cousin’s house?” I whispered.

“Of course not!” she said, pulling a face. “I did it from a business center in a hotel lobby.”

“What hotel lobby?”

“That’s not important. What’s important is what I found.”

I gasped. “You found FedUp?”

“No, but get this,” she said, her head bent to mine as we slowly resumed pushing our carts. “Someone calling herself EasyClean has been making a fortune on that forum. A post pops up, all cryptic and vaguely worded—usually from some woman who’s looking to get rid of something big and needs someone to haul it away for a price. Or some mom who’s dealing with a stubborn stain and she’s willing to pay someone to help her clean it up.” Vero kept her voice low, punctuating each description with one-handed air quotes. “After a few days, EasyClean replies with a couple of carefully worded questions, until it’s clear she and whoever posted the message are speaking the same language. Then EasyClean and her new client take the conversation private. Next thing you know, the thread dies—and I’m guessing so does the big, messy husband.”

“Are you sure you’re not misinterpreting all this?” I asked doubtfully. “If this EasyClean person is a contract killer, why didn’t she respond to Patricia Mickler’s posts?” According to Patricia, she’d spent months on that forum searching for someone willing to dispose of her husband before she finally gave up and asked me.

“EasyClean is a professional. She probably vets her targets. Would you have killed Harris if you’d known he was cooking the books for the mob?”

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