Undercover in Six Inch Stilettos

Undercover In

Six-Inch Stilettos

 

 

Carolyn LaRoche

 

 

 

Undercover In Six-Inch Stilettos

 

Copyright © 2015 by Carolyn LaRoche.

All rights reserved.

First Print Edition: November 2015

 

 

Limitless Publishing, LLC

Kailua, HI 96734

www.limitlesspublishing.com

 

Formatting: Limitless Publishing

 

ISBN-13: 978-1-68058-356-4

ISBN-10: 1-68058-356-5

 

No part of this book may be reproduced, scanned, or distributed in any printed or electronic form without permission. Please do not participate in or encourage piracy of copyrighted materials in violation of the author’s rights. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

 

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to locales, events, business establishments, or actual persons—living or dead—is entirely coincidental.

 

Dedication

 

For the women of LEOW Strength United.

You are the strength, courage, and peace

behind the badge and an inspiration to many.

Blessed are the peacemakers

and those who love them.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Chapter One

 

 

“Never, ever let a mosquito fly up your shorts, Roxy,” Cyndi said, resisting the urge to scratch her backside as she removed her costume. She stripped out of the red bustier with its shiny boob tassels, finally giving up trying to be a lady; she scratched for all she was worth, moaning in satisfaction as she dug at the half-dozen bug bites on her left butt cheek.

“Itchy or not, you still done some good work tonight, sugah.” Roxy laughed, a hard, gravelly sound roughened by decades of vodka on the rocks and Lucky Strike cigarettes. Roxy Feathers was an oddly masculine name for a woman in her profession, but then, who knew? Maybe Roxy
was
a man. In this new world, nothing surprised Cyndi anymore.

“I don’t know about all that, Roxy. I don’t have half your talent.” If by talent Cyndi meant shaking her, um, assets for dollar bills from drunken bums on a Friday night.

The older woman scoffed, waving her hot pink feather boa up and down in Cyndi’s face. “Talent? Ha. What I got is practice and a reputation. I been here a long time, and they know what to expect from me. You? You got that young body of yours goin’ on! Them boys out there, they love a perky set, and you got you a perky set, for sure.”

Roxy disappeared from the dressing room in a flurry of fake feathers and cheap perfume, her laughter echoing back to where Cyndi sat in a rusty folding chair, scrubbing at her stage makeup.

The thick wad of cash on the counter was more than enough justification for flaunting her assets a couple hours a week. Flipping through the crumpled bills, Cyndi counted well over three hundred dollars for the two hours she worked. Swatting at groping hands which belonged to sweaty, horny men took some getting used to, but the money—oh, the money was so worth it. An eight-hour graveyard shift at the Waffle House wouldn’t have produced even a third of that in tips. She certainly wouldn’t get anything near that scrubbing toilets and washing windows. Besides, if she had a God-given perky set, she might as well put it to good, lucrative use. It’s not like she actually had to get naked. In Virginia it was against the law to actually show any of the good stuff—even in a gentleman’s club. She kept her clothes on and made a truckload of money. It was a win-win situation. Except for the part when she lied to her husband every Friday night.

Over the past several months, Roxy had taken Cyndi under her wing. Thanks to the seasoned dancer, Cyndi now knew which regulars to keep clear of, how to recognize a grabber, and the best ways to get the biggest tips without stepping too far outside her comfort zone.

Because six-inch red heels and a matching sequined bustier were so inside her comfort zone.

Apparently middle-aged housewives with killer push-up bras were a real commodity in the world of exotic dancers. The stack of bills sitting on the table was testament to that. Ironically, the whole thing sort of made her feel empowered too. The most sexist job in the world oddly also made her feel more confident. Her women’s studies teacher back at Mount Holyoke College would have had a stroke if she heard Cyndi say such a thing.

It was nearly midnight. Jason had to be pacing the house already. If she ran late, he started calling around, getting his cop buddies to search the streets for her. That was the last thing she needed. In his mind, the streets of Virginia Beach were teeming with men waiting to have a piece of her.

Glancing in the mirror, she made sure every last streak of red, white, and blue eye shadow was gone before brushing out her wild, teased hair. Removing the rest of her Miss Liberty outfit, Cyndi pulled on a pair of jeans, tugged a worn out sweatshirt—which was left over from her husband’s academy days—over her head, and slipped into scuffed and dirty tennis shoes before following Roxy’s path out of the dressing area.

“See you next week, Johnny!” She waved to the bartender, a twenty-something business school student who she knew wore women’s underwear underneath the neatly pressed Dockers he sported.

“You have yourself a good one, little lady,” he drawled. On certain days, Johnny fancied himself from the Old West version of Texas, which was pretty funny, considering no cowboy she ever heard of had a preference for wearing silky lingerie.

“Thanks, you too!”

“Have a good week, Cyndi,” said another dancer.

“You too, Jade. Stay safe, okay?”

“You know I will.” Jade smiled and ducked through the door, heading into the back of the building.

The young runaway was probably only sixteen, although she claimed to be the required eighteen years of age to dance at Sugar Shakers on Friday and Saturday night. Cyndi was pretty sure Jade moonlighted at the corner of Seventh Street and Pacific Avenue during the rest of the week. A pretty rough-looking dude, who Jade identified as her boyfriend, hung around the club on occasion. At best, the guy was probably her pimp. Given Jade’s likely age, child molester seemed more appropriate.

Cyndi threw up a little in her mouth when her hand encountered something sticky on the front door, which she pulled open. The air outside was heavy with sea salt. Cyndi breathed in deeply, clearing her lungs of the dank club.

In the alley behind the building, a cat screeched as it came running past her. A loud crash sounded in the shadows. Cyndi picked up her pace, nearly running to the bus stop, telling herself the cat had knocked over a trash can or something. Why hadn’t she taken the car to work?

Because she would have a hell of a time explaining it to Jason if someone saw her parked outside the club.

The city bus rambled around the corner and pulled up to where she stood. Cyndi didn’t waste any time entering the safety of the vehicle. She was so grateful to be off the dark street, she almost missed the shadowy figure that stepped out of the alleyway with something slung over its shoulder. Homeless people were always digging through the club’s dumpster. She had no idea what this one had found, but it looked heavy.

“Heyy…I know…youu. You’re Ladyy Liberty.” The slurred words came from the seat behind her. Cyndi ignored him, but the drunk was persistent. “Come…on…show mee your tassels!” The voice dissolved in drunken laughter.

Without looking behind her, Cyndi stood up and changed seats. Her wasted admirer belched loudly before falling into a perverted version of the National Anthem. He was on his third repetition of “Rockets and beer, bums trippin’ ’round everywhere” when the city bus mercifully arrived at her stop.

The house was lit up like an airport runway when she arrived at the foot of the driveway. It was tactically sound, Jason always said. Better to see the bad guy first, before he saw them. The image of the shadowy figure which had come out of the alley earlier passed through her thoughts briefly. There was no place for shadowy figures in their yard. Every square inch of property was flooded in light. Planes could land there.

Jason pulled the door open as she reached for the knob with her key. “Where have you been?” Filling the doorway with broad shoulders and a grim expression, he looked her up and down. “I was about to call dispatch, you know.”

“The bus was late. I’m here now, and I’m exhausted. Let me in.”

Jason stepped aside to let her pass but followed her into the kitchen of their cozy little ranch house. “Seriously, I was getting worried. How come you’re so late? Why didn’t you take the car tonight? How come I don’t know where you go to work?”

“Give it a rest, Jason. You know the offices change every week. I don’t know where I’m going to be until I get there. You can stop worrying now, I’m fine. The great resort city of Virginia Beach has nothing to fear except its wild foxes, and I stayed far away from the beach tonight, I promise.”

How the lies flowed so easily these days.

“Oh, please. One stupid tourist website posts one ridiculous article, and suddenly you think foxes are the only danger around here.”

“I’m really beat, Jason. How is Harper tonight?”

“Stop trying to change the subject, Cynthia Jane Mills. You are thirty minutes late. Do you know what could happen in thirty minutes?”

“I could get raped, beaten, or robbed. You name it, it could happen to me. I am the world’s biggest target.” Cyndi sighed in exasperation as she tossed the purse she still carried down on the counter. “None of that happened. The bus was late.”

“You should quit that job. It’s too late at night. I’ll pick up some overtime.” Concern lit his blue eyes as he tried so hard to remain stern. Jason never stayed mad at her for long. Her tough, cop husband was a big old softy underneath it all. Sometimes he just tried a little too hard. She touched his cheek and smiled.

“I’m not quitting. We could use the extra money, and you can’t work twenty-four hours a day.”

“We don’t need it badly enough for you to put yourself in danger.”

“How much danger can I be in? I’m locked inside an office building mopping floors and scrubbing sinks.”

Cyndi hated keeping secrets from the man she loved, but if he knew what she actually did every Friday night from eight to midnight, he would show up guns a-blazin’ and go all
Hawaii 5-0
on the place. Maybe she should have stayed at the office cleaning gig. The pay was crap, but the work was honest.

The wad of cash in her pocket screamed at her to shut up. No way could she go back—it would take a month of office cleaning to make three hundred dollars.

Jason leaned against the counter, arms folded across his chest. She recognized that look immediately. He was doing the cop thing—analyzing her—and she could tell he knew something didn’t add up. His left eyebrow rose a tad higher than his right as he studied her. “Why do you have glitter in your hair?”

Cyndi shook her hair and a shower of glitter rained down on her sweatshirt.
Damn.
Somehow she had missed a boatload of sparkle. The stuff got everywhere.

“Jody brought her daughter’s costume for a dance recital to work so I could help her fix a tear. It was all covered in sparkles. The damn stuff got on everything. Had to go back over the carpets twice with the sweeper, and I’m still not sure we got it all.”

Jason continued to stare down at her from his full six feet of height. His stare was laser sharp; his presence imposing. It was no wonder he was so good at catching the bad guy. Hardened criminals squirmed under the intensity of that stare. Hopefully he couldn’t see through her, despite the fact that she felt as transparent as the shower curtain hanging in their bathroom.

“You think Harper is going to want to do that stuff?”

“Harper is four. It’s a little early to predict if she will be a dancer or a swimmer or…whatever.”

“Yeah, well, I really don’t want that glittery stuff all over the house. The guys won’t ever let me live it down if I show up to work all sparkly like that.” He shook his head.

Cyndi stepped closer to her husband and wrapped her arms around him. “I’m exhausted, honey. How about we go to bed?”

Jason hugged her close. “You gonna wear a little French maid’s outfit like you do when you clean those offices?”

“Jason!”

“Can’t fault a guy for trying.” Jason’s grin was a sharp contrast to his earlier scrutiny. He pulled out the neckline of her top and peered down into it. “Come on. I know you gotta wear some kinda uniform!”

Thank God she had changed into her old white bra from the discount store and left her bustier at work. Stepping back, Cyndi held her arms out and spun around slowly. “You’re looking at it, baby. Doesn’t my ratty old sweatshirt turn you on?”

“Not as much as a little maid’s outfit would. It’s nearly Halloween. Maybe I ought to pick one up for you to wear at work. You know, so you don’t mess up your own clothes.”

“Ohhh, Jason…you are
such
a guy!”

“You would rather I be such a girl?”

“Of course not! Just don’t be so obvious about being a man all the time.” Cyndi filled a glass of water from the tap, drank it in one gulp, and then placed her used cup in the sink before heading toward their bedroom. “Come on, cop man. You play your cards right, I might let you frisk me before we go to sleep.”

Cyndi heard light switches flip, door chains sliding, and the announcement that the house emergency alarm was set. Jason rushed through his nightly round of safety checks as he yelled to her from various locations around the house.

“Do you have anything on you that might hurt me?” Snap went the deadbolt on the front door. “Needles, knives, or guns?” Click went the security latch on the sliding door to the back yard. “Do I need gloves or cuffs…?”

“Not sure you’re gonna need gloves, but cuffs might be fun,” she called back as she climbed out of her clothes and dropped into the cool sheets. Her head hit the pillow, and exhaustion consumed her. The last thing she heard was the sound of Jason undoing his belt as he entered the room, followed by the click of the magazine on his gun as he checked to be sure it was loaded before dropping it into the bedside safe. She was fairly certain she actually heard him dangle a pair of handcuffs before she fell asleep. Passing out was never a problem. Staying that way was.

Sometime later, like every single night of her adult life, Cyndi awoke suddenly. The room was dark, the house quiet. Only the soft, even hum of Jason breathing disturbed the silence. After tossing and turning for a while, she decided to get up and see what the girls were up to. The little chats had become a routine part of most of her nights.

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