15
Pissed-off murder suspect
or not, I had other things to i worry about. Notice I didn’t say
bigger things. Just other. Other big things. Like the fact that even as
I walked out of the memorial—still in shock and with my head
spinning—I saw that our guests were arriving. In return for their
twenty-buck donations, they were hoping for something more than
just fruit, tiny glasses of wine, and nibblers. At Mae’s, they’d
gotten fancy brownies and a taste of the high life. From us—
We needed a Plan B, and we needed one fast.
Lucky for me, I’m quick on my feet, and nothing if
not resilient. In the time since I’d become PI to the dead, I’d
faced worse problems than a messed up art show, and I’d never let
them beat me.
With that in mind, I swallowed down my panic, went
through my mental Rolodex for every way I’d ever seen
anyone—anywhere—raise money, glanced over my
Voilà!
Yes, I am a genius. Which is why when I blurted out
my plan to Ella, I fully expected her to jump up and down with joy.
Instead, she stared at me a little slack-jawed for a moment, before
she said, “I’m not sure we can do that.”
Fifteen minutes later, I was still trying to
persuade her with the whole Pepper-is-brilliant argument. She was
still not so sure. We were back out on the flagstone veranda, and
it was Ella’s turn to pace. She was also wringing her hands. For
the record, I was no less nervous, I just wasn’t going to let it
show.
I patted her shoulder. “Not to worry. It’s not like
we’re desecrating the president or anything. We’re not inside the
memorial.”
“No . . .” Her gaze drifted toward the steps and
the wide expanse of lawn that surrounds the building. Lucky for us,
it was a beautiful summer evening, blue skies, warm without being
sticky. Sunlight dappled the grass and added golden highlights to
the headstones and mausoleums that surrounded the memorial. There
was a pleasant breeze out of the north. It was perfect. Even if we
did make the caterers scamper to find a place they could put the
food and our guests did look a little perplexed as to why they were
being kept outside. “But if the cemetery trustees find out . . .”
Ella squeaked.
“By the time they find out, it will all be over,” I
said, and I wondered just how prophetic I was being. All over? Was
I talking about our fundraising event? Or my job at Garden View
Cemetery?
I knew that Bianca would be there that night, and I
reminded myself that I looked like I just stepped out of La Mode, and that, oh, by the way, I’d never much
liked working in a cemetery, anyway.
Which meant I didn’t have anything to lose.
Except the Cemetery
Survivor contest, of course.
And there was no way I was going to let that
happen.
“It’s going to be fine.” It was like the hundredth
time I’d said this since I made up my mind about how we were going
to keep people entertained now that our art show was ruined. “I
asked them. You saw me go over and ask them,” I reminded her with a
look over to where Absalom, Sammi, Reggie, Delmar, and Crazy Jake
waited. “My team’s all for it, and it’s going to bring in a
boatload of donations. How can anybody fault us for that? It’s what
we’re here for, right? We’re supposed to be raising money to give
to the Monroe Street Foundation. No way our trustees can complain
when that’s exactly what we’re doing. And we’re doing it with class
and style! And this is going to give the restoration project even
more publicity, and Garden View, too. It’s perfect, Ella. We should
have thought of it sooner. We’re going to create a
sensation!”
“Yeah, a sensation.” Ella was paler than any ghost
I’d ever met, and her voice was no more than a terrified whisper.
When a tuxedoed waiter passed carrying a tray of glasses filled
with wine, she grabbed one and downed it. Her cheeks flushed with a
color that matched her outfit. Her shoulders shot back. “Let’s do
it,” she said.
And before I could talk myself out of what I’d
already talked myself into, I hurried to stand on the steps right
outside the main doors into the memorial.
I figured there was no need for a lengthy
introduction or an explanation of any kind. How do you explain that
some whacko with a cheap tube of lipstick ruined days and days of
work? And why would I want to give the nut job that kind of
spotlight, anyway? Of course, that didn’t
Who had engineered the destruction?
Maybe I needed to start being careful about what I
wished for. As I scanned the crowd, my heart bumped to a stop. The
used car dealer owner, Bad Dog Raphael, was in the front row,
looking as suave as ever in a tux. He lifted his wineglass, and the
smile he shot in my direction glistened like the evening
light.
I was too nervous to do more than acknowledge him
with a tip of my head. And pretty surprised when I realized the
reporter Mike Kowalski was standing right behind him. He looked me
over like a starving man in line at the local Ponderosa.
My stomach was already doing flip-flops, so I
didn’t want to think about what he was obviously thinking about. I
looked away—and saw Reno Bob Oates on the other side of the crowd.
When his eyes met mine, they narrowed. Reno Bob bit through the
finger sandwich he was holding.
Never one to back down from a plan I was convinced
was a good one, I pasted a smile on my face and refused to look
around further. The crowd quieted and all eyes turned to me.
I waved. “Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to Team
Two’s fundraiser. We’ve had a little change of plans. So gather
around, grab a glass of wine, and I hope you brought your
checkbooks. We’re about to begin . . .” I paused for a moment to
add to the drama, “the first ever Cemetery
Survivor bachelor auction!”
That one moment of total and complete shocked
silence, and all those opened mouths made me wonder if I’d just
made the biggest mistake of my life. I was about to stammer an
apology and tell them all it was a joke when Reggie sauntered up
the stairs to stand next to me.
And guess what? The ladies in the crowd went
wild.
Three cheers for Reggie. He’d begged, borrowed, or
stole (I didn’t want to think which) a black suit for the night,
and between that and the tie with a pit bull painted on it (an
exact match to the tattoo on his forehead), he looked like a Wall
Street broker gone way bad. As I’d said to Ella, there were a lot
of women who liked that sort of thing. They proved it, too. Absalom
stepped front and center to take over the proceedings, gave the
crowd a rundown of the ground rules we’d made up on the fly (like
making it very clear how the winner was only paying for each team
member as an escort for the rest of the evening), and the bidding
started.
“One hundred dollars!” A woman at the back of the
crowd called.
“One-fifty,” said another.
“Two hundred dollars!” The voice was familiar, and
no wonder; Ella jumped up and down, waving her checkbook like there
was no tomorrow.
All for a good cause, I reminded myself, and
stepped to the side of the building so that I could grab a glass of
wine in peace.
So much for that plan; I wasn’t exactly surprised
to find Jefferson Lamar there waiting for me.
“You call this conducting an investigation?” I
wasn’t imaging it, his nose really was in the air when he looked
toward the front of the building where Reggie was having the time
of his life. Reggie strutted and posed. He paraded and pouted. And
when he stripped off his suit jacket and tossed it over one
shoulder, the bidding shot from three hundred to four-fifty in a
heartbeat. “This is tomfoolery!”
“Yeah, whatever. It’s not like I had a lot of time
to come up with a Plan B. Besides, nobody seems to mind.” I
listened as the bidding hit seven hundred dollars.
“Going once!” Absalom called. “Going twice.
Gone!”
Was I surprised when I saw Ella dash out of the
crowd and grab Reggie’s hand?
“I can’t spend all my time on your case,” I said,
turning back to Lamar. “I’ve got a real job to do, and real people
who are going to ask questions if I don’t do it.”
“I know. I know.” It must have been the night for
pacing. He marched along the perimeter of the veranda and back
again. “You’ve had time, though. You haven’t even gone to see Dale
Morgan yet.”
“I worked on the art show twenty-four, seven.” I
crossed my arms over my chest and glared at him. “I can’t do two
things at once.”
“You have to concentrate. What about the file you
have? The evidence? The newspaper articles?”
This was one place I could use a little
one-upmanship, and I didn’t hesitate. “As a matter of fact, I
talked to Mike Kowalski. You must remember him. He interviewed you
like a million times.”
Lamar remembered, all right. I could tell because
his brow furrowed. “Scandalous lies. Yellow journalism.”
“The guy’s like a hero or something,” I said. “He’s
got a great reputation, and he wins all kinds of awards. Not the
kind of person who would make stuff up. Only . . .”
Lamar leaned nearer. “Only . . . ?”
“Only something about him gives me the creeps. I
mean, something more than just that he’s a creepy old guy, and
that’s creepy enough. But he’s . . .” I shrugged. “I dunno. For a
guy who’s supposed to be the second coming of Geraldo, he’s a big
zero.” I thought about the way Kowalski’s stomach sagged over the
waistband of his khakis. “And I do mean big.”
“And Kowalski, he says—”
“Nothing new, so nothing you’re going to want to
hear.” Lamar didn’t take the hint. He stood there waiting for me to
say more, and I figured since he apparently wasn’t careful about
what he wished for, either, he was about to get what he
deserved.
“Kowalski says exactly what he said back then: the
desk clerk swears you and Vera were at the Lake View plenty of
times.”
Lamar’s cheeks got dusky. “I remember that from the
newspaper. It’s preposterous, of course. I told the police that.
Why would the man lie?”
“Exactly what I want to know. Only, the thing is .
. .” A roar went up from the crowd and new commotion started when
Sammi’s auction was concluded. I don’t think I was imagining it
when I saw Virgil race up the steps to claim her. After the fights
that had been so prominently featured on Cemetery Survivor, nobody else had the nerve to do
much bidding. He got her for a song: three hundred bucks. “The desk
clerk never talked to the cops. He never testified. He seems to
have conveniently disappeared.”
“And that means . . . ?”
“The hell if I know!” Crazy Jake’s auction was
next, and I could see he was having the time of his life taking
pictures of the crowd, even if he did go for only seventy-five
dollars and the woman who won him looked enough like him for me to
figure out it must have been his mother and she knew nobody else
was going to bid.
Delmar did a little better and brought in another
eight hundred.
I did some quick calculations and hoped my math was
right. We were still behind Team One’s five thousand one hundred
and twenty dollar total. I hoped Absalom had fans.
Rather than obsess, I concentrated on the case.
“I’d
“You think Kowalski made up the quotes from the
kid? But why?” He must have seen Kowalski earlier, just like I had,
because he scanned the crowd. I looked that way, too, and saw that
if they weren’t eagerly participating in the auction, at least most
of our guests looked like they were having fun. I didn’t see Reno
Bob, but Kowalski was over at the food table, loading a plate. Was
it a coincidence that Bad Dog was standing right behind him in
line?
I watched them chat and wished I had super powers
for super hearing. “You could just like, pop up over there,
couldn’t you?” I asked Lamar. “I’d love to know what they’re
talking about.”
“Too crowded. Not enough space.” He shook his head.
“If I get close enough to hear them, someone will get frozen
solid.”
I might have been willing to take the chance if
Bianca wasn’t in line, too. And if I didn’t hear a voice calling my
name from out in front.
“What about Pepper?” It was Absalom. Apparently,
the bidding for him was over, and I hadn’t been listening to hear
how much he’d gone for. When he didn’t get enough of a reaction
from the crowd, he boomed the question again. “What about Pepper?
Let’s get her out here!”
The crowd cheered and my stomach went cold. “Oh,
no!” The last person who cared was Jefferson Lamar, but he was the
only one I could complain to. “I told them I wasn’t going to
participate. I told them, no auction for me.”
“It’s for a good cause,” he said, and I guess he
didn’t want to hear what I was going to say about that, because he
winked out.
I thought about climbing the wall that surrounded
the veranda, scaling down the side of the monument, and getting out
of there, and I might have done it, too, if Absalom hadn’t come
around to the side of the building and latched onto my hand. When
he took me out front, the cheers intensified.
“She’s a mighty fine woman,” Absalom said, holding
me at arm’s length so the crowd could get a good look. “What do I
hear for the captain of our team, Pepper Martin?”
“Fifty dollars!” The voice was small and tentative,
and one I didn’t recognize, a man’s. It came from the back of the
crowd, but though I was standing on higher ground, I couldn’t see
him. Of course, that wasn’t going to stop me from sending a
scathing look in that direction. Fifty bucks? For me? Please!
Not to worry, the auction got more lively from
there. “One hundred!” someone called.
“Two hundred,” another countered.
“Six hundred.” It was the first I realized that Bad
Dog had returned to the front of the crowd. He grinned when he
called out his bid.
I reminded myself the whole thing was in good
fun.
“Seven hundred.” This from Mike Kowalski.
I shot a panicked look at Absalom, but he was
having too much fun to notice. He looked over the crowd. “Only
seven hundred dollars for this gorgeous lady? How about
eight?”
“One thousand dollars,” Bad Dog yelled.
Yeah, it was only for the rest of the evening.
Yeah, it was so the cemetery restoration could be completed. No, I
wasn’t sure if I wanted to spend my evening with ex-con Bad Dog
Raphael. He was better looking than Kowalski, that was for sure.
But he was one of my suspects, remember. Traditionally, guys who
arrange
I had my hands at my sides, and I was sending
Absalom little signals to keep the bidding going when a voice
called out from the back of the crowd. “Three thousand!” it
said.
Oh yeah, Quinn knew how to make a dramatic
entrance, all right. He looked like a god in a navy suit, a white
shirt, and a plum silk tie with swirls of navy in it, and he strode
through that crowd like he owned the place. When he sauntered up
the steps, he had a check all written out and in his hands. He
handed it to Absalom.
It would take more than grand romantic gestures to
make me cave, but I couldn’t control a smile, and I guess that told
Absalom all he needed to know. “Going once, going twice, gone!” He
sped through the technicalities, grabbed my hand, and put it in
Quinn’s, who promptly shot me a grin as hot as the deepest fires of
hell.
“You’re mine for the night,” he said.
I smiled politely. “I’m surprised to see you. It’s
been a while.”
“Too long.” He led me down the steps. Now that the
auction was over, our guests were scattering to chat and stand in
line for food. I guess Quinn figured being the big spender got him
special privileges. He went right to the front of the line, got a
glass of wine, and handed it to me. “Would you believe it if I told
you I missed you?”
I wanted to. But then, I saw the curt nod Quinn
gave Ella when she walked by. I clutched my wine in both hands.
“Ella called you. How else would you know about the
fundraiser?”
“Are you kidding? I haven’t missed an episode of
Cemetery Survivor.” There was a twinkle in
his eyes that would have been sexy if it wasn’t so darned annoying.
“I’m a huge fan. I loved the episode where you and
“What?”
Quinn leaned nearer, all slick smiles and smelling
like Flavio. He was too hot to handle, at least in public. In an
effort to stay sensible and stay off Greer’s radar except to smile,
wave, and look good, I stepped away from the table and out onto the
lawn where the crowd wasn’t quite as heavy and there was more room
to keep a safe distance. “Ella told you what happened to the art
show, didn’t she?”
“Which doesn’t mean I didn’t miss you.”
“Which you could have proven like a hundred times
if you’d just picked up the phone and called.”
“Been busy.” He sipped his own glass of wine.
“Been annoyed.” I smiled sweetly.
“It’s always good to get all that messy stuff out
of the way right up front.” He offered me his arm, and I took it.
“I suppose you’ve got to stick around, right? Meet and greet, that
sort of thing?”
“I do.” We did a turn around the lawn, and I smiled
and nodded to the fans around us. “I suppose you want to know more
about what happened to our art show.”
“You realize this is serious, don’t you? Ella says
she can’t imagine who could have done it. But she’s worried. She
says she thinks you might have a stalker and—”
“I knew that’s why you were here.” I couldn’t help
it; disappointment seeped into my every word. “Or does your showing
up have something to do with Bad Dog Raphael being here?”
He looked over his shoulder, found Raphael in the
crowd, and took a careful look. “It does seem odd. One
“Maybe he’s a Cemetery
Survivor fan, just like you.”
“Maybe.” In one smooth maneuver, Quinn dropped my
arm and stepped in front of me so that we were face-to-face. His
voice dipped. So did his gaze. When he was done looking me over, he
looked me in the eye. “Maybe I wanted to see you. Maybe I really
did miss you.”
It was (almost) a remarkably straightforward
comment from a man who was usually anything but. Is it any wonder I
wasn’t willing to accept it at face value?
“You wanted to know more about the gifts I’ve been
finding at the cemetery.” I could have kicked myself for letting
that slip.
Especially when Quinn’s eyes lit. Once a cop,
always a cop, even at a fundraiser. I could practically see him
turn from mildly interested to plenty worried. “Gifts? Ella didn’t
tell me.”
“Ella doesn’t know.”
“You’re being careful?”
I laughed. “I’m carrying a voodoo doll with me
everywhere I go. Does that count?”
“I’m not kidding.”
“Neither am I.” My purse was inside the memorial so
I couldn’t prove it by getting the doll for him to see. “I didn’t
realize I had a problem until tonight. I’ll be careful.”
“Good.” He nodded. “Look, if you’re not busy later
. . .”
We were on surer footing now. Or at least we would
have been if I knew where I stood with Quinn. “I hope you don’t
think that’s what you bid on,” I said.
He was not so easily put off. “Three thousand
dollars is a lot of money,” he reminded me.
“And I’m worth every penny.”
Quinn backed away. “I bet you have people you’re
supposed to be talking to.”
“And you? What are you going to do?”
He pursed his lips. “Oh, I think I’ll wander over
and chat up Bad Dog. And while I’m at it, I might as well talk to
some people and see what I can find out about the vandalism inside
the memorial.” He looked in the direction of the long drive that
loops around that part of the cemetery. “My car’s parked over
there. I’ll meet you later.”
It wasn’t a question.
But then, he didn’t need an answer.