Killer Honeymoon (13 page)

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Authors: GA McKevett

BOOK: Killer Honeymoon
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“You thought a gambling joint would elevate the standard of living?” Dirk asked .
Savannah cringed and gave him a reproving frown.
“You’d be surprised how much revenue a casino can bring to an area,” Northrop replied. “It would save this island’s economy. Something has to be done. The full-time residents are leaving in droves. They love it here, but if they can’t keep a roof over their heads or feed their families, they can’t stay.”
“What does all this have to do with what happened to you and Amelia?” Savannah asked.
“Building the casino isn’t without opposition here on the island,” Northrop replied as he replaced the photo on the table.
“Imagine that.” Dirk gave a little sniff. “Some people complaining that it’ll bring in organized crime and political corruption, breed more prostitution and gambling addictions, more broken homes, stuff like that?”
Northrop fixed him with a long, pointed stare before he replied in quite an even tone. “Yes, some have mentioned those things in passing. But, actually, our biggest opposition is from some environmental groups that object to us developing the land—no matter what we intend to build.”
“What’s their major complaint?” Savannah asked.
“They’re terribly concerned that we might disrupt a couple of species that are endangered, or whatever. They’re all up in arms about something called the island fox and some special jaybirds and flowers called silver lotuses.”
“And the groups trying to protect those animals seem stupid to you?” Dirk asked. He always sided with the animals. People, Dirk didn’t like so much; but when it came to protecting critters, he was rabid.
“It seems to me,” Northrop said, looking annoyed, “that once we brought out the bulldozers, the foxes and birds would simply move to another part of the island. And if the environmentalists are all that worried about the lotus plants, we could dig them up and transplant them anywhere they suggest.”
“How upset are these environmentalists?” Savannah asked.
“Enough to threaten me.”
“What did they threaten to do to you?” Dirk asked, all ears.
“They said that if I broke ground on the project, they would see to it that I paid the ‘ultimate price.’ ” He looked back at the picture on the table. “Now I have.”
“So you’ve broken ground on the casino property?” Savannah asked.
Northrop nodded. “Seventeen days ago.”
Something clicked in Savannah’s head, something that Tammy had said. “When were you shot?”
“Sixteen days ago.”
“How did it happen?”
Northrop walked back to his chair and sat down. If possible, he even looked more exhausted than when he had first come down the stairs. “We had gone out to dinner at the Lobster Bisque. That’s our favorite little seafood hut, down in the harbor. We walked back to our car, which was parked in a lot behind the restaurant. I was opening Amelia’s passenger door and this guy walked up to us. He was wearing a white shirt and black pants, like what the waiters in the restaurant wore. So, at first, I thought maybe Amelia had left her doggy bag, like she always did. We frequently had waiters chase us to our car with her leftovers.”
He paused, steeled himself, and continued. “But when he lifted his hand, he wasn’t holding a bag. It was a gun. The next thing I knew, he’d shot me.”
“What happened then?” Dirk asked.
“At first, I didn’t even realize I was hurt. It was more like a weird bad dream.”
Savannah nodded, remembering. “Yes. It’s sort of surreal. Until the pain kicks in. That jerks you back to reality, fast and furious.”
“True. I didn’t know how bad it was until Amelia saw the front of my shirt, and she started screaming. She shoved me into the car and drove me to the hospital.”
“You have a hospital on this island?” Dirk asked.
“It’s more like a clinic. But they saved my life. Once the casino’s up and running, I’m going to build them a new facility to say, ‘Thank you.’ ”
“How long were you in the hospital . . . er . . . clinic?” Savannah asked.
“Two weeks. Amelia came to see me every day, and that was quite a sacrifice for her, what with her long LA commute. She was a devoted wife.”
“So they released you the day before she was, you know . . . ?” Dirk made an inane wave of his hand.
Savannah had noticed years ago, that Dirk had a difficult time saying the hardest words and often left blanks in his sentences when discussing heartbreaking subjects. Especially when talking to the families of the recently deceased.
“Yes. I was with her less than twenty-four hours after I left the hospital before . . .”
Savannah noted that Northrop had difficulty with those words, too. But she couldn’t blame him. What was worse than having a loved one die? Having them taken from you with murder.
She couldn’t imagine a torment more hellish than that.
So she was particularly gentle when she asked her next question. “Mr. Northrop, as difficult as this must be, could you please tell us everything you remember about that morning?”
“I’ve already told Charlotte everything, but if you think it might help find whoever did this to Amelia, I’ll do it.”
“It might,” Savannah said. “Both Detective Coulter and myself have quite a bit of experience investigating homicides. Not that we’ll do any better than your friend Chief La Cross, but”—she glanced over at Dirk and saw the grimace on his face—“but we’ll certainly try.”
“Since we saw it happen right in front of us,” Dirk added, “we’ve sorta got an investment in the outcome.”
Northrop thought for a moment; then he said, “It was really just a regular morning. Amelia got up and fixed us some coffee. She brought me one of my favorite muffins and a bowl of yogurt and served me in bed. She got dressed for work and made sure that our maid knew which meds I was supposed to take and when. Then she kissed me good-bye, and—”
His voice caught and it was a while before he could continue. “I told her I loved her and thanked her for helping me through such an awful time. Then she left. That was the last time I ever saw her.”
“How did you find out what happened to her?” Dirk asked.
“Charlotte came by and broke the news to me. She was very upset. She and Amelia were very close.”
Savannah thought back on Charlotte La Cross’s mood at the scene and didn’t recall her appearing particularly distraught. But then, people register anguish differently.
“What did La Cross say to you?” Dirk asked. “Did she tell you your wife had been shot, or did she give you that load of crap that she told the television station?”
“She told me the truth. Just as we had when I was shot, we agreed it might be best for all concerned not to be forthcoming with all the details.”
“How would that benefit anyone?” Savannah asked.
Northrop looked down, toying with the sash on his robe. “We’ve broken ground on the casino, but we had a few investors drop out because of those environmentalists. Until others are on board and fully committed, we can’t have that sort of negative publicity.”
For the first time since they had arrived, Savannah had an unsympathetic thought about William Northrop. At the moment, hearing what he had just said, she thought he seemed more like a coldhearted bastard than a loving, grieving husband.
“Negative publicity?” Dirk snapped. Apparently, he was seeing Northrop the same way. “You refer to the facts of your wife’s murder as ‘negative publicity’?”
Northrop’s pale complexion flushed red with anger. “It’s not like we were going to bury it forever! Charlotte is investigating the crime exactly the same way she would whether all the information had been released or not. Why does it matter?”
“Someone might have information,” Savannah said. “Someone could have seen something important, maybe even the killer fleeing the scene. But if the public just thinks it was an accidental drowning.... Do you see my point?”
“Yes, but my investors will be making their decisions in the next twenty-four hours. By then, the autopsy will be done on Amelia, and Charlotte can announce the coroner’s findings. About the bullets and all.”
Dirk leaned back and crossed his arms over his chest. “It couldn’t be that your chief of police wants to hide the fact that she’s had two people shot—one of them dead—in the past two weeks, in this little island paradise of hers?”
“That might have played a part in her decision, too,” Northrop replied. “But whatever her reasons, everything that Charlotte does is for the island. She loves it, and so do I. So did Amelia. She would want us to do what’s best for Santa Tesla and its inhabitants.”
Dirk stood. Savannah could tell he’d had enough. “What’s the name of that environmental group, the one that threatened you?” he asked.
“They call themselves the Island Protection League.”
Dirk pulled out his notebook and scribbled in it. “What’s the head honcho’s name, the one who threatened you?”
“The death threats were anonymous, of course. But the woman in charge is Dr. June Glenn. She has an office down in the harbor, next to the coast guard station.”
Savannah stood, too, and held out her hand to Northrop. With some difficulty, he rose and took it between both of his. This time, his handshake was stronger, and his skin felt warmer and less clammy than before.
“We’re going to do all we can to help you,” she said, “in honor of your wife’s memory. No one should have their life taken from them like that. The person responsible has to pay.”
“Thank you, Ms. Reid. I truly appreciate your efforts.”
Dirk, however, was less gracious. He shook Northrop’s hand, but it was a quick, curt gesture. “We’ll try not to generate any of that ‘negative publicity’ while we’re doing it,” he added as he headed toward the door. “God forbid you don’t get that fine establishment built and the people of Santa Tesla have to keep eating macaroni and cheese three times a day.”
Savannah watched her beloved new husband walk out the door. She turned back to Northrop and tried to think of something she could say to make such an awkward exit a little more gracious.
But she couldn’t think of a darned thing.
“Bye,” she said, and then followed after Dirk.
Chapter 13
“S
orry, babe,” Dirk said as they walked from Northrop’s door back to the Jaguar, “but I couldn’t handle being around that guy a minute longer. That stuff he was saying made me wanna punch his lights out.”
When he opened her car door for her, Savannah thought of what Northrop had said about getting shot as he was opening Amelia’s door for her. She couldn’t help feeling a pang of sympathy for him.
“Oh, I don’t know. He doesn’t seem like such a bad sort, overall,” she said as she got in. “I can see he’s broken up about Amelia—in spite of the other stuff he said.”
Dirk closed her door, walked around, and got into the driver’s seat. As he started up the powerful engine, he said, “You’re just feeling sorry for him because he got shot, like you did. It’s clouding your judgment.”
Savannah’s temper flared. To suggest that she wasn’t being objective was insulting. It was a particularly infuriating insult because, in her heart, she knew it was true.
Those were always the biggest piss-offs. The ones you knew were dead on.
“It’s not just that,” she snapped back. “He’s also a newly made widower. When I look at him, I can’t help thinking how I’d feel if, God forbid, anything happened to you.”
Dirk turned the Jag around in the driveway and headed for the gates. “That’s an emotional thing, too. You’re all goo-goo because you’re a newlywed, so that sorta thing gets to you quicker.”
She shot him a dirty look. “Well, with you talking like that, I’m getting less goo-goo by the minute.”
He reached over and put his hand on her knee. “I’m just saying you can’t let your sweet, compassionate, emotional side get in the way here. You have to evaluate every person and every situation logically at a time like this.”
“What’s your oh-so-logical evaluation of the situation and that guy back there?”
The gates parted in front of them, and Dirk wasted no time getting past them.
“Northrop’s a guy with an expensive bathrobe and an expensive, weird glass house, who’s covering up what happened to him and his wife—a couple of crimes that are as serious as they get—all for the sake of turning a buck.”
“You think that’s all the casino complex is to him? A way to make money?”
“Of course it is. Don’t tell me you believed all that BS about how concerned he is about the island and its poor, struggling inhabitants.”
“He might care about them.”
“William Northrop’s a hotshot developer who’s at the top of his game. He’s got money to burn on stupid-looking houses that aren’t even practical for human beings to live in. He sure as hell didn’t get where he’s at by sacrificing to serve the suffering masses. He’s in it for the money.”
Savannah had a feeling he was right, but she was too far into the argument to abandon it now. “I think he cared about his wife.”
“I didn’t say he didn’t. I just said he’s acting like a jerk for covering up what happened to her, no matter how he rationalizes it.”
“That’s true.”
He gave her a quick, sideways glance—his expression that of total astonishment. “Are you saying I’m right?”
“About that? Yeah.”
He grinned. “Are you telling me I just won an argument with you?”
“You keep this up, I won’t be telling you anything, because I won’t be speaking to you.”
“Holy cow! I just won an argument with you! I’ve known you for how many years and that’s never happened before! It must be because we’re married now! We should’ve gotten married a long time ago!”
“So, where you do want to go now? What’s the next step?”
He laughed. “That’s it. Change the subject.”
As he guided the Jag slowly around the hairpin curves, Savannah took advantage of the view of the harbor below. The morning fog had burned away and the water was a spectacular shade of sapphire blue, which was her favorite color. Since she’d been a child, people had told her that her eyes were that color. Sometimes she wondered if that was part of why she had always had an affinity for the sea.
She decided to think about that instead of the crowing, highly annoying guy in the driver’s seat next to her.
“Well, what do you think we should do next?” he asked, much to her relief.
“We have two possible suspects. We should follow up on one of them, then the other. Who do you want to do first?”
“This conservation group is right here on the island,” he said. “That terrorist behind the knockoff watches and purses . . . didn’t the TV station guy say he’s somewhere in the LA area, waiting to go to trial?”
“Yes. Maybe Tammy can find out where exactly.”
Dirk turned the Jag down the hill, heading for the harbor. “Northrop said that conservation lady, June Glenn, has an office down by the coast guard’s headquarters. Why don’t we go talk to her?”
“Good idea.”
They drove a little way in silence. Then Savannah said, “You’re right about Northrop being a jerk. We’ll keep an eye on him, too.”
“You never trust the spouses.”
She reached over and patted his hand that was resting on the Jaguar’s gear shift. “I trust mine,” she said softly.
“That’s all that matters to me.”
 
Finding the office of the Island Protection League was a bit of a challenge for Savannah and Dirk, even though it was, just as William Northrop had said, located next door to the coast guard station on the harbor front.
What he had neglected to mention was that the league’s front door wasn’t visible from the street. One had to duck between the station and Coconut Jane’s Tavern, walk down a narrow passageway, which wasn’t even three feet wide, to the rear of Jane’s building to find the small door, with peeling blue paint, that bore the IPL sign painted haphazardly by an amateur hand.
“Fancy digs,” Dirk said. “Hell, my trailer looks way better than this. Bet it’s a dump inside, too.”
Savannah shot him a look and thought of the way he’d handled the interview with Northrop. On a good day, Dirk’s basic personality leaned toward “morose.” Sometimes he ventured over into “cranky.” But when he was in “downright cantankerous” territory, she preferred to conduct her interviews without him.
“I’ve got an idea,” she said. “Why don’t you let me talk to this Dr. Glenn gal and you go next door to the coast guard?”
“Why would I wanna do that?”
“They might have logs or manifests or whatever you call ’em from the ferries that go back and forth to the mainland. It might prove interesting to see who was coming and going around the days the Northrops were shot. You’d do better with, you know, the guys than I would.”
He nodded thoughtfully. “That’s a very good idea. I’ll do that. You take care of the lady doctor, and I’ll deal with the rowdy sailors.”
She smiled. To get Dirk to do something, all she had to do was appeal to his inner Knight in Shining Armor. It was one of the more endearing facets of his complex psyche.
“Thank you, darlin’,” she said, giving him the benefit of a deep-dimpled smile.
“Anything for my lady” was the reply before he disappeared down the narrow walkway.
She breathed a small sigh of relief, turned to the battered old door, and knocked lightly.
“Come in,” said a soft voice from within. “The door’s open.”
Savannah turned the knob and pushed. At first, the door stuck in its warped frame. But with a bit more effort, it swung open.
She stepped inside what turned out to be a very small office. One desk, two folding metal chairs, and a wastepaper basket were all the Island Protection League appeared to own in the world.
The walls had probably been white at one time but were now a dingy gray. Their only adornment was a poster of a sea lion touching noses with her adorable pup.
But the lady sitting behind the desk, who stood to greet Savannah, was the exact opposite of her lackluster surroundings.
Savannah figured the woman was around fifty, an elegant, blond woman, with graceful bearing and intelligent green eyes that met Savannah’s with a scrutiny that would have made a more timid soul uneasy.
She was wearing a royal blue suit, a cream blouse made of crepe de chine, accented with a blue-and-black scarf twisted loosely around her neck. Her only jewelry was a pair of small, gold hoop earrings.
As she walked around the desk, Savannah noticed how well the perfectly tailored suit showed off her figure. Savannah also decided that she’d be glad to have a shapely pair of legs like that at any age, but especially at fifty.
“I’m June Glenn,” she said, offering her hand. “How may I help you?”
Savannah returned the firm, confident handshake and answered, “My name is Savannah Reid. I’d like to talk to you a few minutes, if you have some spare time.”
Dr. Glenn chuckled and motioned for Savannah to sit on one of the folding chairs. “Time, Ms. Reid, is probably the one thing I have the least of.” She glanced at her watch. “I have an appointment in fifteen minutes, but until then, you have my full attention. What’s on your mind?”
“William Northrop,” Savannah said bluntly.
Savannah had decided that if she only had fifteen minutes, there was no time to pussyfoot around. She might as well get down to business.
She noticed that the woman’s warm, friendly green eyes went a bit cold at the mention of Northrop’s name.
“What about him?” Dr. Glenn asked.
“I understand that you and your organization have, shall we say, differences with him.”
“He’s determined to destroy this island; we’re determined to save it. Yes, I suppose you could say we have differences.”
“Would you tell me more about that?” Savannah asked.
The green eyes swept over her, evaluating. “Perhaps. First I’d like to know who you are—besides your name—and why you want to know about this.”
Savannah drew a deep breath; then she said, “I’m a private detective from San Carmelita. My new husband and I were here on Santa Tesla, honeymooning, when we saw a woman shot and killed.”
“Amelia Northrop.”
It wasn’t a question, Savannah noticed.
“Yes. Amelia Northrop. So you know it wasn’t an accidental drowning.”
June Glenn smiled, just a little. “I make it my business to know most of what happens on this island. It’s been my home for many years.”
“Then you may also know what happened to William Northrop two weeks before that.”
“He was also shot.”
“That’s right. I spoke to him about it less than an hour ago.”
The doctor’s cell phone on her desk buzzed. She reached down, picked it up, and looked at the caller ID. Then she turned it off.
“Did he tell you that I shot him?” she asked.
Savannah was a bit taken aback by her bluntness, but she welcomed it. If everyone she interviewed was this straightforward, her job would be far easier.
“He didn’t accuse you personally. But when asked who his enemies are, who might want to do him harm, he named your organization.”
“My organization.” Dr. Glenn looked around the shabby office and shook her head. “My organization consists of exactly what you see here, plus two drawers in my desk at home, four volunteers, a beat-up SUV, and a few boxes of equipment in my garage. We’re woefully underfunded. We hardly have the resources to oppose someone like Northrop and his multimillion-dollar company. I can’t imagine why he would name us as a threat.”
Savannah gave her a pointed look of her own. “Bullets don’t cost that much.”
“I didn’t shoot him. When it comes to violence against the person of William Northrop, I’m afraid the height of my ambition is to slap him. And that’s only in my most reckless fantasies.”
“Why is that?” Savannah asked, knowing the answer but interested in hearing this lady’s side of the controversy.
“Because he’s a soulless mercenary who would destroy this island for monetary gain. If he has his way, he’ll build a monstrous complex on some of the most pristine, beautiful beaches in Southern California.”
She glanced up at the picture of the sea lions on the wall. “There are animals and plants here on Santa Tesla that aren’t found anywhere else on earth. But Northrop couldn’t care less. The islands along this area of the California coast are essential to many species of waterfowl, not to mention the seals and sea lions. But Northrop figures he needs a casino more than they need a place to breed and raise their young. It’s unconscionable. And we’ll do anything to stop him.”
“Anything?”
“Short of killing him? Yes.”
“Did you send him death threats?”
“Death threats?” Dr. Glenn looked genuinely shocked. “We most certainly did not.”
Savannah thought for a moment. She believed that the gracious woman in front of her was speaking the truth, as she knew it. But how often does a person completely know those around her?
“Among your volunteers,” Savannah said, “is there anyone whose outlook might be a bit more, say, militant than yours?”
“Absolutely not.”
“Anyone you might have had to dismiss for that sort of thing?”
“No. We carefully screen everyone who wants to join the league. We’re determined not to have anyone like that besmirching and undermining our cause with violence.”
“Okay. Please think carefully. Is there anyone you can think of who might have wanted to join your organization, but he or she was refused on those grounds?”
Dr. Glenn thought only a moment before her eyes widened and a horrified look crossed her face. “Oh no!” she said.
“What is it?”
“There was a man last year . . .”
“And?”
“He came to us from another group, an organization in the San Fernando Valley. They did a lot of illegal things to bring attention to their cause. They vandalized and stole property. They threatened researchers at laboratories, and they were suspected of bombing a major research facility in Anaheim.”

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