Chapter 27

Once again, it was really late by the time I
thought about leaving HotRescues that night.
Once again, I’d suffered a wound—this time a
scratch from a usually benign gate latch, not a falling
knife.
This time, no one was insisting that I go to a
hospital to make sure I was all right. Which was fine with me. I
didn’t like to be babied.
But I wasn’t a fool. In all my many years of
dealing with animals, I’d heard of a lot of minor wounds that
turned into something really nasty and even life-threatening if
they weren’t taken care of adequately.
But not necessarily by a medical doctor in a
hospital emergency room. I called Carlie. Despite how late it was,
she was still at her veterinary clinic in Northridge.
The Fittest Pet Veterinary Clinic was on Reseda
Boulevard, in a relatively quiet commercial area. The building was
delightful, an animal hospital that looked like a medical facility
people might aspire to. It was pink stucco and square, with
treatment rooms along the outer perimeter. Test and care facilities
lined the inside, and windows opened to a large Eden-like
garden.
Dogs in good enough condition, including those
being boarded while their owners were out of town, were treated to
walks outside in the loving custody of the veterinary techs. Cats
weren’t leashed, of course, but they were nevertheless given the
luxury of some pleasant crate time overlooking the lovely garden
area.
Even if I hadn’t been good friends with Carlie, I’d
have made sure that animals from HotRescues that needed medical
care were brought here. And, of course, when my own family’s sweet
little Bosley had been alive—and when his life was clearly almost
over—this was the veterinary facility we had used.
It was long past office hours, but I walked up to
the reception area and pushed a button to ring a bell inside. I
heard it go off, and a female tech with a kind and concerned
expression on her face responded quickly, opening the door.
The Fittest Pet hospital offered twenty-four/seven
emergency care. When I identified myself to the tech, she smiled.
“Dr. Stellan is expecting you.” She looked down at my arm and shook
her head. “That isn’t the usual kind of emergency we see here. Are
you sure you wouldn’t rather go somewhere else?”
“If it was something life-threatening, absolutely.
But I have lots of faith in Dr. Stellan’s ability to perform first
aid on a human.”
“Me, too.” The tech led me through the door into
the heart of the medical center and into a room within the inner
sanctum. “Here she is.” The tech left me there.
Carlie was inside, dressed in a white hospital
jacket, softly petting an unconscious collie mix.
My heart stopped, softhearted organ that it was.
Carlie obviously saw my concern and smiled. “Just waiting for this
fellow to wake up after successful minor surgery to remove a few
coins that he decided to eat. They weren’t just passing through as
we expected, so I went inside to help.”
I smiled back. “And are those coins helping to pay
your exorbitant bill?”
“A down payment. Let’s go next door and take a look
at your arm. You’d think someone who spent as much time around
animals as you would know when to stay away from a dog who’s lost
his temper. And to stay away from vicious gate latches.”
“Yeah, you’d think so.” I’d told her enough, when
I’d called her, to realize she was kidding. She understood the
circumstances and seemed almost as outraged as me about my
confrontation with EverySecurity.
After calling for a vet tech to keep an eye on the
sleeping dog, she sat me down on a seat reserved for patients’
owners in the next-door treatment room. She washed her hands, then
bathed my arm in a solution that I assumed was an antiseptic. She
applied some clear ointment and bandaged the sore spot. My friend
worked so efficiently and gently that I barely felt any pain. I
also showed her the wound on my leg. It was still healing well and
didn’t hurt much.
“Okay, come on into the kitchen and we’ll talk,”
she said.
The pet hospital kitchen, down the hall and around
a corner, was a huge room filled with a variety of cooking and
storage equipment—gas ovens and microwaves, refrigerators and
freezers. I’d seen it before when Carlie gave me the hundred-dollar
tour of the place, but I hadn’t spent time in this area.
Now, she fiddled around with a coffeemaker, added
beans for it to grind, and started a fresh pot. “I assume regular
will be okay with you, even though it’s getting late?”
I assured her that I looked forward to the
caffeine. I’d probably need it to get home safely that night.
While it was brewing, she sat down beside me.
“Okay, now, tell me all. You only whetted my appetite before. Some
jerk of a security guy is accusing you not only of bringing a
vicious dog to HotRescues, but leaving it loose so it could bite
you? What a crock.”
“Yeah, but this crock could turn into a boiling
cauldron of trouble for me.” I explained why I felt so anxious, in
light of the other things that had happened at HotRescues. “The
security guy claimed that the person was wearing a hoodie like
mine—which was missing from my office. Whoever came in could have
grabbed it before bringing the dog in. Or the security guy could
have done it himself. Or lied about it altogether. But if the
police thought I was setting things up before, this just adds
another suspicious act to their list. Especially considering the
purportedly stellar reputation of that damned security
company.”
Carlie’s usually brilliant violet eyes sizzled down
to a deep and ominous purple. “What’s really going on, Lauren? Not
that I know what I’m talking about, but as an outsider looking in,
it appears that someone is going to a lot of trouble to make you
look bad in a lot of ways. The person who murdered Efram? But why
all the rest of this?”
“I’ve wondered that, too.” I sighed, glancing over
her shoulder toward the counter where the coffeemaker seemed to be
finished with its work for the night. I stood and so did she. She’d
already put two bloodred Pet Fitness TV mugs out and I
filled them.
She waited for me to rejoin her at the table. When
I didn’t say anything at first, she demanded, “Well, what’s your
conclusion. Who’s doing this and why?”
“The killer at HotRescues, with ingenuity,” I said,
in a feeble effort to jokingly employ the format of the old board
game Clue.
“Yeah, yeah. Okay, so I gather from your silliness
that you don’t have a clue.”
“I have several, but none conclusive.”
She laughed, then grew serious. “So what are you
going to do about it?”
“Talk it through with you, of course.”
I gave her a rundown of my latest effort at
organizing my suspicions in computer files. “I keep moving my
suspects around, since I’m trying to keep a running assessment of
whom I think is most likely to be the perpetrator.”
“Okay, but what else?”
“Well, here are those I have in mind so far.” I
gave her an abbreviated list of those I suspected, how much I
suspected them, and why. I realized that Matt had moved up several
rungs on my ladder of suspicion. I didn’t want that to have
happened, but it unfortunately made sense.
“So you think those damned puppy mill clowns are
the most likely to have killed Efram?” Carlie demanded when I’d
finished.
“Yes, and after them those other people he knew.
His stepmother and girlfriend both had excellent motives.”
“But the opportunity to do all the rest of this
junk, right there at HotRescues?” I must have looked surprised, for
she smiled and commented, “I’m a TV star, don’t you know? So of
course I watch some of the competition, like those shows where all
kinds of characters, official or not, solve murders. I know all
about the basics that are fed to the audience, including who, why,
what, where, drama, opportunity, and sex.”
My turn to laugh.
But seriousness washed her lovely face into a grave
and worried expression. “Anyway,” she continued, “I have lots of
faith in you, Lauren. I know you’re using all your ingenuity to try
to figure this out, including how a stranger might be able to sneak
into HotRescues. But I think some kind of kick in the butt is
needed, something different. Something that will get your villain
to differentiate himself from the other riffraff of suspects. Let’s
brainstorm, see if we can come up with something that will turn the
tide here.”
“I’ve been thinking about that,” I admitted.
“Something has come to mind. I’ve no idea if it’ll work, but let me
run it by you.”
I did, and despite throwing in suggestions and
concerns of her own, Carlie appeared to love it.
Which was a good thing, because the next day
Detective Stefan Garciana appeared bright and early at
HotRescues.
Although I wanted to tell him to get lost, I was
the epitome of politeness and invited him into my office. He sat
immediately in one of the chairs in my conversation area, motioning
me to join him. I swallowed my irritation that he was giving me
nonverbal orders in my own environment.
“I heard about what happened here last night,” he
said, his features even darker than usual, which tossed an urgency
to run in my direction. “I was also in touch with the manager of
EverySecurity. Do you know what he alleged?”
“Mr. Bransom and I are not exactly admirers of one
another. He told me last night how much he suspects me of bringing
that nasty dog here to attack me and make people feel sympathetic.
Same thing about dragging Honey into the storage shed so I could
use her as an excuse to get myself stabbed—again to elicit
sympathy. And all of this so the world would assume that I’m so
targeted and persecuted that I couldn’t have murdered Efram—which
he’s sure I did. Is that it?”
“You’ve nailed it.” Garciana’s mouth lifted on one
side, whether because he wanted to feign a grin or heartburn I
wasn’t sure. “It certainly would explain how whoever’s been doing
it all has gotten onto the property despite your having a security
company on board.”
“There are other explanations, like Efram showed
his killer how to circumvent the system the first time and the
method is still working.”
“Maybe.” Garciana didn’t sound at all convinced.
“Any idea who it could be?”
“You’re the detective,” I countered, trying to keep
my tone reasonable instead of as explosive as I felt. “You should
have figured it out by now and arrested the real bad guy.”
“I hear that a lot from people who want me to think
they’re innocent. The problem is, ninety-nine percent of the time
they’re the bad guys themselves. How about you, Ms.
Vancouver?”
“This is the other one percent, Detective,” I
assured him. But at the ironic skepticism he glared at me, I was
sure my time to prove the truth to him was running out.
I’d have a lot of planning to do, but I intended to
start on my hopefully last-ditch scheme to save myself right
away.