TWENTY-SIX
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Tricia stared at the photograph, tracing
her finger along the edge of the frame. There was no mistaking the
woman who held Sarge in her arms: Elaine Capshaw.
Elaine had told Tricia that she and her husband
weren’t close to any of their local relatives. If so, what was
Brandy Arkin doing with such a photo?
Footsteps approached and Tricia almost let the
chest’s lid slam. She tossed the photo back inside the chest, shut
the lid and took several hurried steps away from it, trying not to
look out of breath when Brandy reentered the room with a definite
limp.
As promised, Brandy held a square of dirty, yellow
polar fleece with little tractors driving across it. It had a
crocheted yellow border, which now hung ragged on two ends. Was it
possible the thing could be repaired to its former state? Maybe
Davey wouldn’t care what it looked like as long as he was reunited
with it. Perhaps Mary Fairchild at By Hook or By Book could
replicate the thing if Brandy destroyed the original.
“Where’s that check?” Brandy demanded.
Tricia gave a nervous laugh. “Oh, sorry. I guess I
should have written it out while you were gone.”
Brandy frowned.
Tricia pulled her checkbook and a pen from her
purse and proceeded to write out the check. She’d put a stop on it
the minute the bank opened in the morning. She tore out the check
and handed it to Brandy. And caught sight of a gold band on her
right hand.
Not a band—a Claddagh.
Sweat broke out on the back of Tricia’s neck, and
she swallowed. It was Brandy who had given Bob Kelly Monty
Capshaw’s business card and encouraged him to give the pilot a
call. And that sore leg? Sarge had bitten whoever attacked Elaine
Capshaw. But why would Brandy threaten Elaine?
Brandy’s frown increased as her gaze traveled
around the room. “Something’s different. Have you been poking
around in my things?”
“Of course not,” Tricia lied, as every muscle in
her body tensed. She had to get out of there.
Brandy focused on the blanket chest and Tricia took
a step to the left. The door was at least ten or twelve feet from
where she stood. Had Brandy locked it behind her after she’d
entered the house?
Brandy tossed the piece of blanket on the floor,
stalked over to the blanket chest, grabbed the handle, and flipped
open the lid. As she looked down at the contents, the color drained
from her face.
Tricia bent down to retrieve the remnant of Davey’s
blanket. “I’ll bring you the cash first thing tomorrow morning,”
she said, already backing toward the door.
“You’re not going anywhere,” Brandy
commanded.
“I don’t understand,” Tricia bluffed.
“You saw that picture. You know.”
“What picture?”
“You were at my aunt’s house the night she died,”
Brandy accused.
“I was?” Tricia said, hoping her voice hadn’t
already betrayed her.
“You took that miserable yappy dog to the
vet.”
No use denying that. But how did Brandy fit in?
Elaine Capshaw was her aunt?
And then she remembered Monty Capshaw’s obituary.
It listed a couple of nieces: Brenda and Cara. Brandy was really
Brenda?
“I’ve got to get going,” Tricia said. “I’ll see you
in the morning, and then I think our business will be
finished.”
“You’re not going anywhere,” Brandy said, and
reached for a slender wooden bat—the kind used for T-ball. Had
Brandy bludgeoned Elaine Capshaw to death with something
similar?
“There’s someone waiting for me outside. If I don’t
turn up in the next couple of minutes, the Sheriff’s Department
will be called.”
“I don’t believe you.”
“I’m telling the truth,” Tricia insisted.
“Sure, like you told the truth when you walked in
here saying you wanted Davey Black’s blanket. Now, what do you
really want?”
“I was going to ask you to list some things
on eBay for me. I understand that’s your new business.”
Brandy shook her head. “David said you were
suspicious about Deborah’s death.”
“He did?” Oh boy. Why did she have to open her
mouth and voice that opinion to so many people?
Brandy tapped the end of the bat against her open
left palm. “Deborah Black’s death was an accident—plain and
simple.”
“You’re right. I’m sure that’s what the National
Transportation Safety Board will decide. I mean, why would someone
deliberately let his gas tanks run dry and then crash his plane
into a stone gazebo? It just doesn’t make sense. Unless . .
.”
Brandy tapped the bat harder against her palm. That
had to smart.
“Unless,” Brandy said, picking up the story, “he
was well paid to do it.”
“Ten thousand dollars?” Tricia volunteered.
“Money that was supposed to come back to me when
the will was read. That was the deal. But Elaine showed me the
will—it had never been amended. I drove that miserable old fart to
the attorney’s office myself. But the lawyer made me leave the room
when Uncle Monty supposedly signed it. He said it would prove I
wasn’t coercing the old man to make the changes.”
“And did you coerce him?”
Brandy snorted. “My uncle was already living under
a death sentence. All I did was suggest a way to make it easier on
his darling Elaine.”
“And now she’s dead. I suppose under the terms of
the original will, you and your sister would only inherit if Elaine
were out of the picture.”
“Yeah, and now I have to split my own ten grand
with my sister,” she grated.
“But now you get David. And isn’t that what you
really wanted all along?”
“I don’t even get him. He’s decided I’d be a
liability in the hoity-toity art world. I’m not pretty enough, or
thin enough, or educated enough for him. He’s looking to step up—to
that old hag Michele Fowler.”
“She’s far from a hag,” Tricia said.
“She’s twenty years older than me! And yet he’d
rather be with her than me! After all I did to—”
“Set him free?” Tricia asked.
“Of Deborah—of that rotten kid. Did you know
Deborah’s mother plans to soak David for child support even though
she knows the kid isn’t his?”
“Is that why you tried to run Davey over the other
night?”
Brandy’s eyes grew wide, and she drew back her arm
and swung the T-ball bat at Tricia.
Tricia ducked, and the momentum—and her sore
leg—threw Brandy off balance. Tricia raced for the door but fell
over her own feet, tumbling to the floor. Brandy took advantage and
charged at her, but Tricia dove for cover behind the bulky pink
plastic child-sized house.
The bat came down again and again, but the plastic
was made to withstand the destructive power of ten small children.
Still, Tricia cringed with each strike, her eyes darting to look
for any avenue of escape. The former parlor, with its high
ceilings, seemed almost cavernous.
Bam!
That split second of inattention cost her, as
Brandy slammed the bat into Tricia’s upper arm. As Brandy drew back
to strike again, Tricia scrambled to her left, but there was
nothing there to hide behind.
She grabbed the handle of the flimsy cabinet,
yanking it open—an instant shield against Brandy’s fury.
Brandy’s bat came down again and again against the
door and the cabinet wobbled, the hinges pulling out of the flake
board. Brandy screamed epithets as the bat hammered against the
cabinet and it began to come apart in shreds.
Tricia had pulled the handle closer to her body,
ducking her head to avoid the blow, when the cabinet tilted crazily
forward and fell, squashing Brandy like a bug.