NINE

  

Morgan spun and collided into a cropper wearing a long-sleeved white shirt, gray yoga pants, and Cat in the Hat slippers. He gripped the woman’s arms and pressed his back into the wall, keeping them both upright.

“Bathroom. Emergency.” She struggled out of his grasp then hurried into the ladies’ room.

Morgan stormed out the door.

A scream echoed from the bathroom.

I ran into the bathroom. Bob was a few paces behind me. The woman in the cat slippers was shaking, her gaze directed at a person lying on the floor of a bathroom stall. I eased her out of the way and looked into the stall

It was Marsha. Her hair flared around her head, legs tilted daintily to the side, one hand rested on her stomach, the other arm stretch out and bent at an angle like she was reaching for something. She was out cold.

“He hurt her.” The accusation slipped from me.

“I’m on it.” Bob ran from the room.

I knelt beside Marsha and checked her pulse. Steady. I breathed a sigh of relief. I looked at the woman who gaped at the unconscious Marsha. “Call 9-1-1.”

“I left my phone in the crop room.”

I went to retrieve mine and realized it was in the hallway. When Morgan rammed into me, I had dropped it. “Mine’s in the hallway. You can use it to call. Or there’s a guy cropping at a table near Scrap This…he’s a doctor. Ask for Garrison.”

“I’ll get him.”

I had thought Morgan’s behavior in the hallway was about proving I murdered someone in the past, when it might have been about the present and trying to get rid of a witness who’d tie him to Marsha’s attack. Why Marsha? Was she the ID thief? Marsha Smith was a very benign name. It sounded fake. The pill bottle had “Ma” on it.

Why would Marsha take on a role that put her somewhat in the public eye if she was hiding from people who wanted to kill her…or drag her to jail?

I examined her for any obvious signs of injury. Nothing.

There weren’t any pictures of Marsha anywhere on the Cropportunity website or the social media pages. I chalked it up to her being embarrassed by her appearance or camera-shy. Marsha was attractive and dressed nicely even though she liked plain styles and neutral colors. No reason to fear the camera, unless a woman didn’t want anyone being able to find her.

Marsha stirred a bit, and moaned.

“You’ll be okay.” I smoothed hair back from Marsha’s forehead, looking for a bruise or some other indication of a head injury. A breath puffed out from her, followed by a medicine smell.

I wrinkled my nose.

“What’s wrong?” Garrison’s voice entered the restroom right before he did.

“I don’t know. Bob and I heard a woman scream and ran in here and found Marsha unconscious.”

Garrison placed his hands on my arms. Without any more encouragement, I stepped to the side, getting out of the doctor’s way. He knelt beside her.

All of a sudden, Marsha’s breathing hitched and a loud snore echoed through the room. Garrison leaned back a little and let out a cleansing breath. He motioned for me to come closer. “I have a feeling she’s had a bit to drink.”

Drinking and cropping went hand in hand. For some croppers, necessary supplies to bring were bottles of wines, coolers, and beer. A few even brought blenders from home so they could make margaritas in their rooms. Marsha had plenty of ways, besides the bar, to get a drink this weekend. Running scrapbooking retreats wasn’t the best business for a recovering alcoholic. Detective Bell’s announcement must have sent her over the edge.

“What are we going to do?” I sat back on my heels and looked at Garrison.

“We’re going to take Marsha to her room and let her sleep this off.” Garrison hoisted Marsha into his arms.

  

Fortunately, Marsha carried her room key in the sleeve with the room number written on it in her back pocket. I slid the card into the slot. The light turned green.

Garrison shifted the snoring woman in his arms. “She’s not as light as she looks.”

“I recommend you not tell her that.”

“I don’t plan on having a conversation with her about this.” Garrison carried her over the hotel room threshold.

Both beds had clothes strewn about them. I grabbed the garments from the bed closest to the door and placed them on the one next to the windows. A laptop hummed from the desk located near the window.

Garrison deposited Marsha onto the bed. She snored and rolled onto her side.

I slipped her shoes off. “Should I cover her up?”

“I don’t think she should be left alone.” Garrison settled the intoxicated woman onto her side, using pillows to prop her up.

“Should we call an ambulance?” I hovered nearby. People died from alcohol poisoning. Maybe taking care of her ourselves, to save her from embarrassment, wasn’t such a good idea.

He checked her vital signs. “That’s not necessary. Sleeping it off will be safe unless she’s on some kind of medication.”

“I’ll go look in the bathroom.” I figured it was the most likely place Marsha kept medication. I liked being useful and taking action. Standing around doing nothing never set well with me. Of course, doing anything was usually what got me into trouble. At least this time, I had actually plans and reasons for my actions.

“I’ll find Lydia and ask her if Marsha takes any prescriptions or over-the-counter medication.”

“Also, check if Marsha left a bag at the registration table in the crop room. She might keep her medications with her. Tell Steve what’s going on so he doesn’t worry, and if you can, make sure he’s still feeling okay.”

“Will do.” Garrison saluted me and smiled.

On the vanity in the bathroom, I found her make-up bag filled with a variety of cosmetics. Hair spray. Hair straightener. A fancy, high-powered hair dryer. Three different types of brushes completed the hair routine collection. Round. Flat. Curved. It made no sense to use all those brushes for blow drying her hair when she planned on ironing it flat.

I walked out of the bathroom. Marsha continued snoring. I shuddered. No wonder Lydia wasn’t splitting a room with her, though being roommates might have helped ensure Marsha stayed on the wagon.

I paused, pivoted, and headed back into the bathroom. I searched in all areas possible for alcohol. Either Marsha drank it all or she hadn’t planned on her demon finding her at the retreat. Or she hid alcohol in other parts of the room. I knew it was none of my business what another adult did, but I didn’t want the woman imploding her own life because of a bad choice. It was one thing to get scammed and have to admit it, and another to go back down the dark road of an addiction. It turned a person into someone else entirely and left hearts broken all over the place. Some of those scars were hard to mend.

I went over to the nightstand and opened up the drawer. A vinyl tote bag embroidered with Meds in bright red filled the space beside the Gideon Bible.

Quickly, I unzipped the bag and dumped out the contents onto the comforter.

A folded piece of paper was mixed in the sealed packages of over-the-counter pain relief, stomach relief, and sinus medication. If anyone had a minor ailment this weekend, Marsha could hook them right up. I straightened out the paper. It was a list of names and numbers. Sixteen numbers by each name. My stomach tightened. Credit card numbers.

I took in a deep breath and tried settling down the conspiracy theories going through my brain. Marsha had a good reason for having those numbers. I recalled the trouble Marsha had working the credit card reader on her phone. The signal kept timing out. Marsha must have planned to go through Paypal, or she had a system on her computer that allowed her to type in the numbers.

A warehouse store membership card caught my attention. I examined the picture. I looked at Marsha then back at the card. I repeated the process a few times. It could be Marsha as a red-head and a slightly darker complexion. A few weeks in the sun would create that color of golden skin. Or it could be Lydia. Both of the women’s facial structures were similar. Then again, Violet Hancock also had the same oval shaped face, thin lips and small, rounded nose.

The name on the card spellbound me: Marcia Smyth. Whoever was in charge of inputting information that day sure did put in a creative spelling. Why would Marsha accept the card with her name wrong … if the card belonged to Marsha?

Was the identity thief targeting Marsha? She had a very common name. What better way to being swiping an identity than by using a little creative spelling to start with, intending to fix it later.

Marsha snorted again then flopped onto her back, her arms spread out. The pillows slid to the floor.

Should I take it and show it to Bob? I flicked the edge of the card. How would I explain it to Marsha? I could fill Bob in without showing it to him. Marsha wasn’t doing anything wrong by having the card, and there might be a reason she didn’t want anyone to know.

I stared at Marsha’s passed-out form.

Marsha groaned loudly and rolled toward me. She smacked her lips, eyes still closed.

I shoved the medicine and paper back into the bag. The computer made a whirling and clicking sound.

“What the...” Marsha blinked a few times.

The card was in one hand, the bag in the other. Quickly, I placed the card into my pocket, and shoved the pouch under the pillows.

“Feeling better?” I walked over to the windows and adjusted the curtains, making sure rays of the dipping sun didn’t hit her in the face. I had a feeling a huge headache was coming Marsha’s way, if she didn’t already have one.

“Where am I?”

“Your room. I helped Garrison get you up here after we found you passed out in the bathroom.”

“Passed out?” Marsha shot up. With a groan, she pressed her hands to her head and slunk back down to the mattress. “How? I wasn’t drinking.”

I had no idea why she wanted to lie to me. Her breath smelled like a brewery. I wouldn’t be able to keep her in the room until Bob got here if I called her out on the lie.

“Then when you get home you might want to see a doctor. You were sound asleep on the bathroom floor.”

Marsha smacked her lips a few times. “Can you get me a bottle of grape soda from the fridge? My head feels fuzzy.”

“Sure.”

“You can have one too.” The bedsprings squeaked. “How long have you been here?”

“A little while.” I snagged two of the eight-ounce bottles. I turned and saw Marsha eyeing the edge of the medicine pouch poking out from under the pillow. “I was going to see if you were on anything that shouldn’t be mixed with alcohol.”

“I’m not.” Marsha reached across the gap separating the two beds.

I handed her a bottle before she toppled onto the floor.

“Have you found out anything about the hit-and-run this morning?” Marsha placed the pouch back into the drawer and then gulped down some soda. “I need to know if my ex-husband is here and after me. I’m thinking it might be best I stay in my room.”

“Not anything new. I have a friend who might be able to help you.”

“A friend?” She chugged another long swig.

“He protects people.”

“Like a cop?”

“In a way. You can trust him. He’s helped me in the past.”

Marsha turned the can around in her hands. “On your other cases?”

The doorknob turned.

Grabbing my arm, Marsha yanked me toward her. “Hide,” she whispered into my ear.

The hint of alcohol still remained on her breath. I pulled back a little. “Why? It’s your room,” I responded in the same low voice.

“Because if it’s Lydia, I don’t want her to know someone had to bring me up here.”

If it was Lydia, Garrison had told her we found Marsha in the bathroom, but I kept that part to myself.

“Under the bed. Quick.” Marsha laid back down.

Why not? Maybe I’d learn some information about the partners. Like why Lydia worked with someone she knew was an alcoholic.

I shoved the clothes off the bed, making a pile of garments to cover the space between where the box spring ended and the floor began.

The door opened.

“There you are.” Lydia’s angry voice preceded the slamming of the door. Marsha moaned.

The mattress pressed down and the bedsprings squeaked.

“You can come out now,” Lydia said.

Who else was in the room? I held my breath.

Marsha snored and snorted a few times. I figured she wanted to distract Lydia and give me time to burrow further under the bed.

“I know you’re here, Faith. You don’t think the lady mentioned that your friend and you helped Marsha? He’s downstairs and you’re not. And someone was enjoying a cold beverage not too long ago.” Lydia sighed. “Fine. We’ll play hide-and-seek.”

A loud retching sound turned my stomach.

Marsha moaned.

“Get in the bathroom,” Lydia said. “I warned you. Geez, you can’t even stand on your own.”

The gagging sound erupted again.

“Don’t you dare throw up on my shoes.”

I heard a door close.

I scrambled from under the bed and scuttled to the door on my hands and knees. If Marsha and Lydia came out anytime soon, I’d say I left to get a snack and a drink. Hopefully, they’d ignore the fact I had neither.

Quietly, I opened the door and slipped into the hallway. I delicately shut the door. I released my breath and started down the hallway.

The ice and vending machines hummed. The sound helped soothe the pounding of my heart. Now I had to decide if I should go find Bob first, or check in with Steve.

I heard a bing from a few yards away. Bob stepped out from the elevator. “What are you doing out here?”

“Lydia showed up. Marsha didn’t want her partner knowing about her drinking, or sleeping on the job. Marsha insists she hasn’t been drinking, and had me hide. I snuck out while Marsha was emptying her stomach.” I slipped into the alcove housing the vending machines. I tugged out the membership card and held it out for Bob. “I found this and thought it might help you out.”

“Found?” Bob eyed me suspiciously before taking the laminated card.

“I was looking to see if Marsha was on any medications that weren’t wise to mix with alcohol.”

“And you found this?” Bob examined it.

“If someone is trying to steal Marsha’s name bit by bit, this card might help you track them down. They have to be here if Marsha found the card here.”

“How do you know it’s not hers?”

“Because why would she accept a card with a creative spelling of her name,” I said.

“You don’t think Marsha will notice that it’s missing?”

“If she’s asks, I’ll fess up. I’ll tell her I thought it was something that would help her. She thinks her ex-husband is after her.”

“After as in—”

“Kill her. She’s afraid the woman run over this morning was supposed to be her.”

Bob taped the card on his fingernails. “Marsha might be taking the first steps to create a new life.”

“What?”

“Sometimes the only way to get away from an abusive spouse is to vanish. There are how-to disappear books on the market and the first piece of advice is to create a new identity by changing just a few letters in your name.”

“Do you think Morgan’s here to hurt her?”

“I don’t know. I’ll run this name and address and see what I can find out. I might finally have an address to tie to the identity thief. Unless it’s just because a retail clerk got bored and pranked her.” Bob placed the card into his wallet. “Now, you better get back to the crop before someone starts finding your behavior suspicious. Bell believes Marsha knows something and is withholding it from him, and you hanging around her isn’t going to endear him to you.”

“I seem to be good at bringing out the worst in homicide detectives.”