17
Iwas glad the feds cleared up the phony
credit card case. Honest. Of course, Ella and Jim couldn’t have
agreed more. Seeing as how they’re both big-time cemetery geeks,
the fact that the memorial was being used by the crooks as a
drop-off and pickup point didn’t sit well with them. As much of a
cemetery fan as I’m not, I can’t say I blamed them. Even though I
knew better than anyone that they didn’t all deserve it, there is a
certain amount of respect we owe the dead. The memorial as a stash
house . . . that went above and beyond, even in my book.
Needless to say, the president was thrilled to have
that part of the “commotion” explained. He was convinced that now
that the phony cards were taken care of, things would get back to
as normal as they can be when you’re dead and running the country
as you would have more than a hundred years ago from the inside of
a tomb you can’t leave without poofing into nothingness.
Have I mentioned how the life of a PI to the dead
can get complicated? In my world, all that made perfect
sense.
But none of it helped me much. I mean, not with
Marjorie’s case. Sure, I could have backed out gracefully. Thanks
to Patankin, who was talking up a storm in the hopes of staying in
a nice, cushy federal pen like the one my dad was in rather than
the nasty place that was waiting for him back home, the feds had
plenty of new information to go on; they’d made huge strides in
cracking the international counterfeiting ring.
At the risk of sounding too full of myself, let’s
face it: they couldn’t have done it without me. I was something of
a heroine and I knew it, and that meant I could throw in the towel
without losing face.
But I still didn’t know who killed Marjorie, and
truth be told, it was driving me nuts. Besides, Quinn was now on to
the fact that I was conducting my own investigation into Marjorie’s
murder, and I knew how his devious little brain worked. He was
going to try doubly hard to solve the case, just to beat me to the
punch.
And there was no way I was going to let that
happen.
With that in mind, I closed up the memorial at four
that Friday and went over to the administration building. It’s not
like I’m a hidebound traditionalist or anything, but on previous
cases, I had done some of my best thinking back in my office behind
my own desk. It was where I sat now, scribbling the names of my
remaining suspects across the top of a legal pad.
Jack. Er . . . excuse me . . . Jonathan
Bryce-Conway.
Nick Klinker.
Ted Studebaker.
Gloria Henninger.
As for motives . . .
I added an entry below each of their names.
Jack could have known Marjorie took the credit
card, and I guess if you’re a criminal mastermind, that kind of
thing pisses you off.
Nick and Ted were in cahoots about something, and
if it was something Marjorie didn’t agree with, either one of them
(or both) could have had a reason to kill her.
Gloria was crazy, and as I’d learned in the course
of my PI career, crazy people don’t really need a motive. Then
again, she did have that statue staring little Sunshine in the face
every time the pug went outside for a potty break. In Gloria’s
book, I bet that was motive enough.
That’s as far as I got when there was a knock on my
office door and Ella popped in. I turned the legal pad over on my
desk.
“I’m so glad you’re still here,” she said. As is
typical of the weather in Cleveland in the fall, it was freezing
the day I went out to Chagrin Falls to see Ted Studebaker, and now
it was hotter than blazes again. Ella looked a little like a
pumpkin in her orange flowing skirt and matching top. She’d been on
pins and needles ever since the feds set up the stakeout at the
memorial and she hadn’t come down from the adrenaline high.
Standing just inside my office door, she fidgeted with the string
of earth-colored beads she wore around her neck.
“I didn’t want to go to Jim with this,” she said.
“Even though I probably should. And I will. I mean, of course I
will. Eventually. But you’ve been such a help when it comes to
things like this, Pepper, I wanted to let you know about it first
and see what you think. I’m pretty sure Jim won’t mind. After all,
he agrees with me that you’re just amazing. He said it himself just
this afternoon when we were talking. I couldn’t be more proud of
you if you were one of my own girls. I mean, just look at the way
you helped out the FBI! Sometimes I think you’re some kind of
superhero in disguise.”
I wouldn’t go that far, but it was nice to be
appreciated. Whatever Ella was going to ask of me, I was more
inclined to do it now than I was when she walked into my office.
Anybody else, I would have accused of thinking I was shallow and
playing to my weakness. Ella? Not so much. Ella didn’t have a
mean-spirited bone in her body.
“What do you need?” I asked.
She scrunched up her face. “I can’t believe it
completely slipped my mind, but of course, it did. With everything
that’s been going on around here lately, it’s hard to imagine any
of us are keeping anything straight. But there I was, sitting in my
office just a little bit ago, finishing up the fall schedule of
seminars and tours, and that’s when I remembered.”
Just in case my blank expression didn’t say it all,
I asked, “Remembered what?”
Ella threw her hands in the air. Her left arm was
loaded with beaded bracelets that matched her necklace and they
jangled when they clanked together. “The volunteers’ lockers, of
course.”
I breathed what I hoped didn’t look like too big a
sigh of relief. This was going to be easy and it involved
absolutely no effort on my part except to remind her, “The
volunteers don’t have lockers anymore.”
“Of course.” Her smile was shaky. “You were in on
the meeting when we decided we would no longer provide lockers to
the volunteers. Like Jim said then, it’s too much of a liability
from a security standpoint, what with having to keep an eye on
their personal possessions and then having the volunteers going up
and down those steps into the basement. A lot of them aren’t as
young as they used to be, you know, and I’d hate to think that
someone might slip and fall. And it’s not like the old days when
most of our volunteers lived right in the neighborhood and walked
to work. Back then, they needed a place to store umbrellas and
coats and things. Now most of our volunteers live outside the area,
and they drive here to the cemetery. They leave a lot of their
stuff in their cars, and their coats, of course, get hung in the
main coatroom off the reception area. You remember how Jim thought
that was such a good idea. Jennine can see the coatroom, right from
her desk, and we don’t have to worry about anything getting
misplaced or stolen.”
I nodded, and waited for more, but even before Ella
said it, a spark ignited inside my brain. Like that idea was the
rocket that propelled me, I rose to my feet. “But Marjorie was a
volunteer for a long time. That means—”
“She still had her locker.”
We finished the thought in unison.
A world of possibilities spun through my head, but
before I could get them in any sort of order, Ella continued. “She
was told not to use it anymore, but you know how Marjorie could be.
She thought she was special and she didn’t have to follow the rules
like everyone else. I just thought of it a bit ago, the locker I
mean, and I went downstairs to check and . . .”
“You found something?” My spirits soared to the
ceiling. If the clue I needed to wrap up the case was under my nose
all this time, I’d give myself a mental slap—but not until I
flaunted my success in front of Quinn. I was moving toward the door
even before I realized it and I only stopped when Ella put a hand
on my arm.
“I didn’t find anything. Not exactly,” she said. “I
mean, I didn’t even look inside the locker. I just came right up
here to get you.”
“Because . . . ?”
She led the way. “Come on. I’ll show you.”
I hate basements. They’re mostly damp and
stinky, and the dark and the quiet along with the moldy smells
freak me out. This is especially true at Garden View, where the
basement of the administration building is as old as the cemetery
itself and had once (back in the olden days) been used to store
bodies in the winter when the gravedigger’s shovels couldn’t
penetrate the frozen ground.
Naturally, I wasn’t at all sorry when Jim decided
to eliminate the locker room down there. It meant I never had a
reason to go into the basement.
Except, of course, when Ella had a hold of my arm
and was leading the way.
We got to the door outside what used to be the
volunteer locker room and she drew in a calming breath. “You
ready?” she asked.
“I’m not sure. If there’s a body, or—”
“Oh, it’s nothing like that,” she said. She pushed
open the door and flicked on the overhead fluorescent lights.
It took a moment for my eyes to adjust to the dull
light. In the recent past, the locker room had been used for
storage, and against the wall to my right, there were boxes piled
on the tan linoleum floor. At the far, shadowy end of the room was
a door that I knew opened up to stone steps that led right into the
cemetery. Directly across from the door were two rows of gray metal
lockers with a wooden bench between them.
“That’s Marjorie’s,” Ella said, pointing to the
left, all the way down at the end of the row and farthest from the
door. “It was just like that when I came down here.”
“Just like . . .” I closed the distance between the
door and locker, taking a closer look. “It was open? It
was—?”
Ella nodded.
I stood in front of the locker. Not only was it
opened, the lock had been forced, and it didn’t take a genius
detective to figure that out. The door near the lock was smashed
and dented.
The contents of the locker itself looked as if
they’d been put through a blender. “Ransacked,” I mumbled. “Just
like Marjorie’s house.”
“What do you suppose they took?”
I’d been so busy examining the locker, I hadn’t
realized Ella had crossed the room and was standing right in back
of me. When she spoke, I jumped.
“Sorry.” She patted my arm and leaned forward.
“What do you suppose they took?”
I shrugged. “If something’s missing, we can’t
possibly know what it is.” I was tall enough to see up on the top
shelf of the locker. “Head scarves,” I said, making a face as I
plucked a pile of the nasty, filmy things out of the locker and
handed them to Ella. “Our thief didn’t take them, so whoever it
was, he had better taste than Marjorie.”
“That’s mean, Pepper,” Ella scolded, but I didn’t
have to turn around to know she was smiling when she said it.
I poked through the rest of the locker. There was a
ratty sweater hanging from the hook on the door, and in the main
body of the locker, one of a pair of battered black loafers, an
extra bottle of that gag-in-the-mouth gardenia perfume Marjorie
always wore, and a pair of black polyester pants. The seam at the
crotch was ripped. “There’s nothing but junk in here,” I said,
stepping back to get an overall look and maybe a feel for what
somebody could have been after. “There sure isn’t anything worth
taking. Or is there?”
From where I was standing, the light reflected
against something on the top shelf, all the way in the back that
had been hidden by the scarves. I reached a hand in, and slid out a
pile of credit cards.
“Holy—!” I counted them below my breath. “Six
more,” I said, and I spread them out like a hand of cards to show
Ella. “And all with different names on them. So Marjorie really did
have a get-rich-quick scheme. I bet she was planning on using these
babies little by little, and thinking that if she did, no one would
ever trace them. Whatever our thief was looking for, it wasn’t
these.”
“Which means . . .”
Ella had been in on all the same meetings with the
FBI and the local cops that I’d taken part in, but I couldn’t blame
her for thinking like a civilian. She’d never had to deal with the
criminal mind before. “It means that whoever broke into Marjorie’s
locker, it probably wasn’t Jack.” I didn’t need to fill her in on
the details. Because of those meetings, she knew (almost) all about
Jack. “If he broke into the locker, he would have taken any cards
he found. He’d have to be thorough. Any loose ends might lead right
back to him.”
“Is that a good thing or a bad thing?”
This, I had to think about. I was relieved to think
that maybe Jack wasn’t the killer after all. I mean, the thought of
kissing a guy who’d just recently tossed a woman over a balcony
railing was enough to make anybody shudder.
But I still didn’t have all the answers I was
looking for, and not having them didn’t sit well with me.
“I don’t know,” I admitted.
“But you’re going to find out, right? We need to
get things back to normal around here, Pepper. A murder in the
cemetery is bad for business. People are afraid to even come visit
their loved ones. We need closure.” The look in Ella’s eyes was so
hopeful, how could I possibly let her down?
In keeping with my promise to Ella, I did
something I never, ever do except in the direst emergencies: I went
into work on the weekend.
For one thing, there was that whole deal about how
the detecting part of my brain worked better when I was in my own
office.
For another, I wasn’t kidding when I said that the
murder and the stakeout had kept us all on our toes. It’s not like
I’m a cemetery whirlwind, but I do have work to do. And I was way,
way behind on it all. Ella was nearly done with that fall schedule
of hers, and she’d been bugging me about how many tours I had
planned. It was early September. I had to get hopping.
My final reason for going into the office on
Saturday should come as no surprise. Now that Scott was knee-deep
in his case, we were talking on the phone, but he’d been busy, and
we hadn’t been able to hang out together. Staying at home—alone—and
risking the chance of Mr. Doughboy showing up at my apartment was
not my idea of a good time. Even on the weekends, Garden View is
fairly busy. After all, it’s never a good day to die, and most
Saturdays, families come in to buy plots for their recently
departed loved ones. Unlike a certain president, I was grateful for
the commotion. With people coming and going, I felt safe. Since I
didn’t have to worry about stalker boy, I could concentrate on my
case.
That was what I was doing. Or at least it was what
I was trying to do. Too bad my brain was stuck in a loop that went
something like this:
Jack, Nick, Ted, Gloria, Ray, Doris.
Then it started all over again.
I was getting nowhere, and it was making me crazy.
I’d brought my lunch and I’d just decided to step outside so I
could sit at the picnic table behind the administration building.
Maybe a little fresh air and sunshine would work wonders on my
fact-clogged brain. I was headed out there, just passing the steps
that led down to the basement, when I heard a noise.
I knew better than to go down there alone. But I’m
not a detective for nothing. (I mean, I am since the whole Gift
thing that got me into it in the first place wasn’t my choice. But
even on my own and if I didn’t have this dumb Gift, I’d still be
plenty curious. And have I mentioned plenty anxious to solve the
case before Quinn did?)
With that in mind, I looked around for a likely
weapon and grabbed the one and only thing I could find, a laser
pointer Jim had recently used for a presentation to the Board of
Trustees and had left out on the credenza in the reception area. If
there was an assailant down there, I was ready. Maybe I couldn’t
bean him with the pointer, but I could at least blind him long
enough to run away.
Since it was Saturday and I wasn’t officially on
the clock, I hadn’t been too worried about what to wear that day.
Of course I still looked like a million bucks, but I was a million
bucks in skinny jeans, an emerald green T-shirt, and sneakers. Good
thing, too. Sneakers don’t make noise on steps.
I was at the bottom of those steps, holding my
breath and wondering what to do next, when I saw that the door into
the old locker room was opened a crack. I knew that wasn’t the way
Ella and I had left it the night before. I crept closer.
And heard another noise.
It sounded like a muffled gasp, and I wondered if
our burglar had caught some other employee by surprise and was
holding that person hostage. Or worse. Just in case I needed it, I
flicked on the laser and charged into the locker room.
If I had been a little less enthusiastic and a
little more careful, I wouldn’t have interrupted Ray and Doris
doing . . . well, what it was they were doing.
“Ew!” I jumped back and squeezed my eyes shut, the
better to let Doris get up from Ray’s lap, where she was sitting
with her legs sprawled on either side of him and her blouse
unbuttoned. I heard shuffling and waited what I thought was an
appropriate amount of time before I dared to open my eyes again. By
that time, Doris was standing next to Ray. They were holding hands
and smiling like lovestruck teenagers.
“What’s the matter, kid?” Ray asked. “You’ve never
seen two people canoodling?”
“I’ve never seen . . . I never want to see . . .
You’re too old for sex!” I wailed. When I shuddered, the light of
the laser pointer did a jitterbug across the wall.
Doris and Ray laughed.
“Never too old,” Ray said. He slipped one arm
around Doris’s shoulders and gave her a hug. “Thanks to that little
blue pill you hear so much about, I’m never going to be too
old.”
“And you two? . . . Together? . . . Here at the
cemetery . . .” I am anything but straightlaced when it comes to
sex, but I couldn’t find my voice.
My embarrassment didn’t faze Doris in the least.
She smoothed her little old lady black skirt into place and
carefully buttoned her blouse. “You’re not going to tell Ella, are
you? She’s such a nice lady, and I love her dearly, but somehow, I
don’t think she’d approve. Then again, we are volunteers. It’s not
like we’re being paid and we need to be accountable for every
minute we’re here.”
“Not to worry.” I congratulated myself for
stringing together three coherent words and flopped down on the
bench where Ray and Doris had just been—
I stood up again.
“I’m not going to tell Ella. I wouldn’t even know
where to begin.” I glanced around the gloomy locker room. “There’s
got to be a better place for you two to . . .” I searched for the
right words and decided on, “Get together. It’s depressing down
here. And anybody could walk in on you.”
As if he were the teenage boy and I were the angry
parent, Ray hung his head. “Well, nobody ever comes into the locker
room anymore. That’s why we figured we’d be all right. Besides,
we’ve never done it down here before, but we just couldn’t wait,
you know?”
I did. I didn’t want to discuss it. Or think about
it. Or think about thinking about it. Murder was a far more
acceptable subject than old people sex. I crossed my arms over my
chest. The laser pointer made a zigzag pattern against the far
wall. “Hey, while you were down here, you didn’t see anything
unusual, did you?”
Doris giggled. “We weren’t looking for anything. We
weren’t looking at anything. Anything but each other’s eyes.”
Their sighs overlapped.
I stayed strong. “Somebody has been down here,” I
told them. “And just recently, I think.” It wasn’t a warning
because, really, what they did and where they did it weren’t really
any of my business, but I hoped they appreciated the subtle advice.
“Ella and I were down here just yesterday, and when we were, we saw
that somebody else had been down here, too. We found something
interesting.”
Ray’s expression sobered. He took a step in my
direction. “You mean something that relates to Marjorie’s
murder?”
I reminded myself that, though they weren’t on my
short list, I had considered both Ray and Doris as my culprits.
Maybe I’d need my laser pointer after all. I clutched it tightly in
one hand. “You didn’t like her,” I said, looking at both Ray and
Doris because, of course, it applied to both of them. “Ray, you
hated Marjorie because she played you for a sucker. And Doris, I’ll
bet you were jealous.”
She made a pish-tush sort of sound. “Marjorie was
the one who was jealous of me,” she insisted. She looked at Ray,
her eyes glistening with mischief. “After all, I’ve got the hot
hunk of a boyfriend she always wanted. That’s why she was so mean
to me all the time. She knew Ray didn’t love her. She knew he was
only spending time with her because she was leading him on about
the money. Yes, I was angry that she took up so much of Ray’s time.
But as you can see, Ray and I have worked that out, and I came out
the winner.”
“But the day Marjorie was killed, you were both in
the cemetery, and when I saw you that morning before I headed over
to the memorial, you both looked a little guilty and a little
flustered. Because . . .” If I wasn’t supposed to be a professional
detective, I would have slapped my forehead. “I saw the two of you
coming out of the copy room. You were doing . . .” I made a funny
little waving gesture toward the bench. It was better than actually
saying the words. “You were doing up there what you were just doing
down here.”
“Not exactly,” Ray corrected me. “The copy room . .
. that’s too public. You know, too much of a risk. But we were
getting a few smooches in.” He grinned at Doris. “Right,
honeybun?”
Doris hurried forward to put a hand on my shoulder
to console me. “So you see, Pepper, we couldn’t have killed
Marjorie. I’m sorry to disappoint you.” I’ve got to say, I had to
love a woman who apologized for not being a murderer. “I know you’d
like to get to the bottom of the mystery, but it couldn’t have
possibly been either me or Ray. We were busy. You know,
together.”
Now that we’d cleared all that up, there didn’t
seem to be anything else to say. Doris was still twinkling like a
prom queen, but Ray must have suddenly realized just how awkward
the situation was. He shifted from foot to foot. “You think we
should all go upstairs together? You know, so we don’t look too
suspicious?”
“That’s probably a good idea. That way, if anybody
asks, we can tell them we were down here checking on the envelope
supply or something. Only, Ray . . .” Honest, I just couldn’t bring
myself to say it. I touched the light of the laser pointer ever so
briefly to Ray’s fly. “You might want to zip your pants
first.”