Chapter 29
I was jazzed.
I was also convinced.
Now, I just needed proof.
Before I left Happy Saved Animals, I had to take
the tour I’d anticipated. Darya was pleased to show me around and
introduce me to some of the residents and volunteers.
Her husband joined us for part of the walk-through.
He was friendly but quiet.
I wasn’t especially talkative, either. I had a lot
on my mind. But nothing prevented me from visiting as many dogs and
cats as I could.
When I left, I did something I tried not to do
during the day. I called Brooke, who’d slept at HotRescues last
night.
Unsurprisingly, I got her voicemail. “I’m making
one stop on my way back,” I said in my message. “If I get the
information I think I will, we need to talk about what I should do
next.”
An obscure communication? Probably. But Brooke
would figure out the gist of what I was talking about.
The drive from Mar Vista to Westchester was only
around six miles. I had to head south, though, which was opposite
from the way I needed to go to return to HotRescues.
I didn’t call in advance, which was possibly
foolish. If Cricket wasn’t at Better Than Any Pet Rescues, my extra
miles would be for naught.
Also, my frustration would be astronomical.
Fortunately, she was there. Surprisingly, Miguel
was in the office with her. Or maybe not so surprisingly. I’d
already figured out that he still lived in the office/house. It
might be too soon, on this early Friday afternoon, for him to
report to work at the restaurant.
The shelter’s office was located on the left side
of the building’s vast entry hall. Hearing voices, I’d headed in
there to find the two of them engrossed in conversation. Friendly
conversation.
Very friendly conversation? Like, were these two
now an item, with Bethany no longer an obstacle? I’d thought they
didn’t like each other, but that could have changed—or just been an
act.
It could also be a motive for one or both to have
killed Bethany. But my untethered mind now galloped in a different
direction.
“Hi,” I said perkily. Standing together at one side
of the room, they broke apart, looking a little guilty.
“Welcome, Lauren.” Cricket sounded breathless.
“What brings you here?” Her face was flushed. She wore a PST
T-shirt with a pin near the neckline—a plain one, without the
diamonds Bethany’s had.
“Some questions,” I said. “Hi, Miguel.”
“You here to do more snooping to figure out
Bethany’s murder?” He sounded amused.
“Working on it,” I said. “Not that it should give
you any comfort, since I’m nobody when it comes to the
investigation, but neither of you is at the top of my list.”
Cricket was still second, but my suspicions of her were waning.
They might fade completely, depending on her answers.
“Go ahead and ask.” Cricket plopped down on a chair
at the table in the middle of the room. She was certainly different
in appearance from Bethany, even if she’d inherited her attitude.
Yes, she was shorter and a little heavier—but in some ways more
attractive, since she wasn’t all about appearance. She ran her
fingers through her curly hair, as if deriving Samson-like strength
from it.
Miguel pulled a chair up so he was almost
shoulder-toshoulder with Cricket, allied with her against me.
“Yeah,” he said. “What are your questions?”
“I like your pin, Cricket.” I intended it to sound
like a non sequitur, not the harbinger of what I was about to delve
into. “Once I have HotRescues join PST, when will I get one?”
“Right away.”
“Then you keep a bunch around?”
“Yes.” She frowned, clearly puzzled about my
interest.
“I gathered that Bethany was a real stickler for
members wearing those pins to meetings. Will you be the same
way?”
“What are you driving at, Lauren?” Her question
exploded from her.
“Just interested. Has anyone ever lost a
pin?”
“Yes, but not often. Bethany got very upset when
the first person did.”
“Was there a second person?”
“Well . . . yes. Darya.”
Yes! My assumption had been correct. But that
didn’t necessarily mean anything.
“But we never told Bethany or anyone else about
Darya,” Cricket continued. “I just gave her a replacement and
shuffled the inventory numbers.”
“Did Darya find it again?”
“I don’t think so. She promised to return the new
one if she did. I told the cops that, too, when they mentioned the
pins.”
If true, that shot a hole in my premise. But Darya
might not have returned it. And her reaction suggested she had
something to hide about pins . . .
Cricket shook her head. “What is all this
about?”
“Curiosity, that’s all.” I had learned from Brooke,
who’d learned from the cops, about the PST pin found with Bethany’s
corpse. They were apparently asking about pins, maybe casually. Had
they gotten the same reaction from Darya that I had?
“I’ll bet it’s more than curiosity,” Miguel
said.
I shrugged. “No big deal.” Which was a lie.
“Actually, I was just in the neighborhood”—lie number two—“and
thought I’d drop in to see how you were doing, Cricket. Better Than
Any, too. Glad to see that everything looks fine. Right?”
“Lauren—” Cricket drew out my name. “You’re not a
nutcase. You’re a smart lady, and I know this is about something
important, right?”
“Honestly,” I said, “I don’t know yet.” I was near
the door, and both of them had followed, as if to be sure I was
serious about getting out of there. “I’ll be in touch again soon. I
really like the idea of PST, you know? I may actually see about
getting the HotRescues board’s”—meaning Dante’s—“okay to join.
Thanks.”
I waltzed out with a big grin on my face. I’d acted
like a ditz, or someone utterly cagy. Or both.
The important thing, though, was that I believed I
had my answer.
Brooke’s the one with the investigation
background. Plus, her new guy Antonio is an LAPD detective. When
she’s feeling well, she thrives on law enforcement stuff. At the
moment, her health seemed to be improving all the time.
Consequently, when I called her on my way back to
HotRescues and told her what I’d learned, she sounded even more
excited than me—a feat that seemed nearly impossible, considering
that I was so full of anticipation that I wanted to dance my way to
Mamie’s former shelter and tell her she was saved—from an
unjustified murder rap, at least.
But that would have been foolish. And
premature.
I could be wrong . . . as infrequently as that
happened.
Brooke called me back a short while after I reached
HotRescues. By then, I’d gone inside to retrieve Zoey from Nina and
was taking her for a walk along Rinaldi Street.
“Antonio will bring Detective Greshlam to
HotRescues at around three this afternoon,” Brooke said as I held
my smartphone against my ear to catch every word. “I’ll be there,
of course. Be ready to lay everything out for them, okay?”
“Absolutely.”
“By the way—Gavin, the new trainer? He’s amazing.
Not that Cheyenne needs much instruction, you understand, but
Gavin’s still managed to teach him quite a bit. He’s not just a pet
now. He’s becoming a trained security dog.”
Interesting. I wasn’t sure when they’d gotten
together, but Brooke’s praise of Gavin added yet another reason to
keep him on at HotRescues.
The dance I’d been prepared to make as I drove
finally found its way into my steps as I led Zoey back toward our
shelter. Fortunately, she had been productive quickly, and I’d
cleaned it even faster. She was energetic as always and thought our
happy jogging was a game. She jumped in circles on her leash and
barked enthusiastically as I laughed and ran.
Never mind that I’d have been happier if the
contact from the Robbery Homicide Division with whom I’d meet that
afternoon was Detective Stefan Garciana, who’d been the thorn in my
side the last time I had to figure out the solution to a murder.
He’d been the one to suggest looking at the least likely
possibilities first, to try to eliminate them . . . maybe.
Not always. Like this time.
Detective Greshlam had been the one to interview me
right after Bethany’s death. She had stayed involved with this
case. She was the right one to talk to. Plus, she’d be
tempered—possibly—by Antonio, if she wanted to stay on her
colleague’s good side. Or not.
“What’s going on?” Nina asked while Zoey, panting,
hurried to the water bowl in the welcome room.
I was panting, too, and went into the adjoining
kitchen for a chilled bottle of water. When I got back, I told
Nina, “No guarantees, but I think I’ve found evidence that clears
Mamie.”
“Great!” My second-in-command leaped from behind
the leopard-print counter and gave me a hug.
Zoey and I took a nice, slow walk around the
shelter, including the center building where I checked on the cats
and toy dogs. We again had empty spots that would soon be filled by
more of the animals rescued from Mamie’s.
We’d have even more empty spots in a couple of
weeks when the work on the property next door was completed.
Which reminded me of the work I needed to do on my
end to publicize Dante’s fund-raiser, only about a week away.
For now, I led Zoey back toward my office, where I
hoped I could concentrate on what I needed to do until the cops
arrived that afternoon.
We sat in the conference room in the middle of the
second floor of the HotRescues admin building. I’d told Nina to
hold all calls—and that we weren’t to be disturbed. By
anyone.
I was sure she understood that to include
her.
I watched as Detective Greshlam’s eyes moved from
one photo on the room’s walls to the next. They each showed some of
our successes—pets and their new owners, all smiling.
I sat on a blue upholstered wooden chair, the one
at the head of the oval table. The detective sat at my right, and I
wondered if her chunky girth was comfortable in the narrow seat.
Brooke and Antonio sat across from her. We were a study in
contrasts, with both detectives, Antonio included, dressed in
suits, and Brooke and me in our own standard uniforms around
here—hers a black security T-shirt over jeans, and me in jeans, and
a blue HotRescues knit shirt.
“Detective Bautrel tells me you have some evidence
to present to us in the Urber murder.” Detective Greshlam’s glare
yelled that I should have butted out, but she didn’t say so in
front of her fellow officer.
Antonio didn’t hesitate to stick up for me—which
suggested he really wanted to impress Brooke. Or maybe he was the
one who was impressed—with the theory I’d had Brooke describe to
him. “I didn’t get all the details, but what I heard puts a new
spin on the case. Start where you want, Lauren, and tell us
everything.”
I didn’t intend to get into a lot of detail, like
naming everyone I’d considered as potential suspects and why I’d
eliminated some. Nor did I want to mention how I’d settled on
Cricket as the murderer . . . until that last conversation with
Darya. As a result, I didn’t actually tell them everything, only
what mattered.
I explained first about what I’d determined last.
“The day before Bethany was murdered, she held that meeting about
hoarding. One thing she said that I had thought odd then, but
hadn’t glommed on to its importance, was something about how all
shelter administrators who were part of Pet Shelters Together had
to make sure their funds were used to help animals, nothing else.
When I talked to Darya about Bethany’s speech that day, and how I’d
learned afterward that Mamie was far from the only administrator
Bethany tried to coerce into joining PST by what amounted to
blackmail, Darya got upset. I can’t prove it, but maybe you
can—that Bethany’s comment was aimed at Darya, or Darya at least
took it that way. Bethany may have learned that Darya was stealing
donated funds from her own shelter and pressured her, on threat of
disclosure to the world, to join the shelter network.”
“That’s not very convincing, Lauren.” Detective
Greshlam’s tone sounded much too condescending. I curled my lips
but said nothing. “Not without evidence.”
Antonio responded. “Want me to go for the warrant
to start checking it out, Joy?” I hadn’t heard the detective’s
first name before, although her card had said her first initial was
J.
“I’ll handle it.” The detective’s tone remained
professional, but she turned a seething look on Antonio. He took it
in stride.
“Then there was the PST pin,” I continued. “I heard
one was found with Bethany’s body. Since Mamie hadn’t joined the
network and gotten one, that should have kept her from being your
top suspect.” Joy’s face remained impassive. If that was a reason
they hadn’t arrested Mamie yet, she wasn’t going to admit it. “Were
you aware that Darya had lost hers?”
“She’d gotten a replacement.” The detective
shrugged her shoulders as if this line of information was
irrelevant and she was bored. But Antonio was grinning. “She showed
it to us. Anyone could have taken her missing pin.”
“And I’m sure all the other administrators showed
you theirs, too, didn’t they?” I asked.
“Maybe.”
“I’d imagine you figured that the one dropped near
Bethany was left on purpose by the killer, maybe to make you think
that whoever did it was a PST member—which made you believe it
wasn’t. But maybe a member actually did lose it during the
murder. Did you ever determine where it might have come
from?”
Another noncommittal shrug.
“You might check with Darya. She got even more
upset when I mentioned it in the same conversation.”
The detective’s eyes widened. I aimed a glance at
Brooke, who was smiling as broadly as Antonio.
“One final thing. Darya worked in the Better Than
Any Pet Rescues office now and then after joining PST. With some
supervision, sure. But she could easily have learned where Bethany
kept her gun.”
“So could a lot of other people.”
“Like Mamie,” I agreed, “since she’d threatened
Bethany once before, and had been threatened right back. But Darya
and Bethany had been arguing. Quite a few people heard them. Those
disagreements could have become threats. It’s just one more thing
you may want to look into about Darya.”
“That’s it?” Detective Greshlam didn’t sound
impressed.
“Taken all together, I’ve suggested a lot of motive
and means for Darya’s guilt,” I said. Flimsy? Maybe, but I wasn’t a
detective. Put all together, with some official legwork . . .
“You’ll have to confirm them, of course. Opportunity, too, if she
was there and dropped one of her two Pet Shelters Together pins in
Bethany’s blood. All that is up to you, of course. But I think
Darya’s a suspect worth looking into.”
We were finished, so I took them both through the
shelter area. Antonio hadn’t visited here a lot, but he enjoyed the
place.
I wasn’t sure whether Detective Joy Greshlam had
any kind of heart, but I suspected she did, since it seemed to
break just a little, at least, as she gushed over some of our
residents.
I wondered whether she’d be back someday to adopt
one.
Antonio hung back with Brooke when his fellow
detective eventually left. “What do you think?” I asked as we
headed toward the parking lot. Greshlam and he had driven
separately.
“You definitely gave some angles they might not
have known,” Brooke said.
“No guarantees,” Antonio said, “but I like the way
your mind worked on this, Lauren. If you’re right, I’ll call you so
you can observe the arrest.”