Read The Cat Who Went Underground Online

Authors: Lilian Jackson Braun

Tags: #Qwilleran; Jim (Fictitious character), #Detective and mystery stories, #Journalists, #Mystery & Detective, #Political, #Yum Yum (Fictitious character: Braun), #General, #Cat owners, #cats, #Journalists - United States, #Pets, #Siamese cat, #Yum Yum (Fictitious character : Braun), #Koko (Fictitious character), #Fiction

The Cat Who Went Underground (26 page)

BOOK: The Cat Who Went Underground
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“Someone else did it!” she cried. “She stole my lipstick!”

“Who?”

“Louise!” She was moistening her lips anxiously.

“Who’s Louise?”

“A girl. She does… bad things.”

“Why would she kill five carpenters?”

Her voice became hysterical. “They’re bad! Her daddy was a carpenter! He was a bad man!” Suddenly she jumped up and rushed to the door.

“Don’t forget your grandmother’s box,” Qwilleran said.

Joanna ran from the cabin and drove away in her van, spraying gravel.

Slowly and with regret Qwilleran dialed the number of the state police.

 

CHAPTER 19.

 

THE SUN WAS shining, Pickax was drying out, and bells in the Old Stone Church on Park Circle were ringing joyously as Qwilleran arrived at his apartment over the Klingenschoen garage. In his car were his typewriter, summer clothes, coffeemaker, the Siamese in their travel coop, and of course their turkey roaster.

He consulted his horoscope in the weekend edition of the Moose County Something, which now carried a syndicated astrology column in response to reader demand.

“You have some explaining to do, Gemini,” said the anonymous astrologer. “Socialize with an old friend and get it off your mind.”

Qwilleran telephoned Arch Riker. “Okay, boss, I’m back in Pickax and ready to talk. Why don’t you come over for a drink tonight? The refrigerator man came back from vacation, and we have ice cubes.”

“Do you mind if I bring Amanda with me?”

“If you can stand her, I can stand her,” said Qwilleran with the breezy candor of a lifelong friend. “I assume your off-again romance is on again.”

“We’re having dinner with the Hasselriches at six, so we’ll have to see you later, about ten. And do me a favor, Qwill. I’d appreciate it if you’d water her drinks. She’s bad enough when she’s sober.”

“Tell me one thing, Arch. How come you broke down and bought a horoscope column for the Something!”

“I read a survey. The horoscopes get a larger percentage of readership than anything else in the paper, including the weather.”

At ten o’clock the couple climbed the stairs leading to the former servants’ quarters over the garage, Amanda scowling and grumbling about the narrowness of the treads and the steepness of the flight.

Riker said confidently, “I knew you wouldn’t last long in Mooseville, Qwill. You’ve lived too long with concrete sidewalks, traffic lights, and fire hydrants.”

“How could you stand the damned mosquitoes?” Amanda said. “And all that sand! and all those noisy birds! They’d drive me crazy! And all that water! Who wants to look at a flat body of water all the time?”

“I’m glad my return has your blessing,” said Qwilleran cheerfully as he served the refreshments with a flourish of cocktail napkins, coasters, and nut bowls.

“You’re in a good mood tonight,” the editor said.

“I talked to Polly in England. The doctors have advised her to cut her visit short. She’s got a bad case of bronchitis and asthma. Wrong climate, I guess.”

“Too bad she had to lose such a good opportunity,” said Riker, “but for your sake I’m glad she’s coming home. A woman with bronchitis and asthma is better than no woman at all.” He chuckled, and Amanda glared at him.

Qwilleran asked, “How did you enjoy your dinner with the Hasselriches?”

“They’re charming hosts,” Riker said. “No doubt about it.”

“They’re so charming, I could throw up!” his companion growled.

“Was their unmarried daughter there?”

“Irma? Yes, she’s just as cordial as her parents,” the editor said. “Attractive woman, too.”

Amanda made an unpleasant noise.

Qwilleran said, “Irma is a mystery to me. I wish I knew what she’s all about.”

“I’ll tell you what she’s all about,” said Amanda with her usual belligerence.

“When she was eighteen she killed her boyfriend, and old Judge Goodwinter – before he went off his rocker completely – sentenced her to twenty years in prison, but the Hasselriches made it worth his while to reduce the sentence. She got probation in the custody of her parents, plus orders to do ten years of community service. She’s been serving the community ad nauseam every since!”

Riker glanced at Qwilleran and rolled his eyes expressively. “So, let’s have the latest news on the Mooseville murder beat, Qwill. As usual it happened after our weekend issue had gone to press. I’ll be glad when the new building’s finished and we can start printing five days a week.”

“First I’ll let the cats out of their apartment. Otherwise Koko will raise the roof when he hears us talking about him.” He opened a door at the end of a hall, and two proud Siamese paraded into the living room with tails and whiskers perpendicular. Yum Yum commenced an investigation of shoelaces. Koko rose effortlessly to a bookshelf six feet off the floor and settled down between Simenon and Conan Doyle.

“Well, Nick Bamba came over Friday night,” Qwilleran began, “and we were having a quiet evening with the lights out and loaded firearms across our knees, in case anything happened, when Koko suddenly started making an ungodly fuss. He wanted to go underground! We let him go, and he led us to the names of the five carpenters who are alleged murder victims: Joe, Mert, Buddy, Clem, and Iggy – together with the dates of their demise. Captain Phlogg wasn’t included; apparently the old soak really drank himself to death, as everyone thought.”

“Where were the names?” Riker asked.

“Daubed on a floor joist in a tight spot where only a cat would find them. Nick thought the names were written in blood, but it was lipstick. That’s when I knew the killer was Joanna Trupp.”

Amanda snorted in disdain. “What’s to stop a man from buying a lipstick if he wants to write on joists?”

“True,” said Qwilleran, “but the first three names matched the purplish-red lipstick that Joanna lost in my cabin. Yum Yum had hidden it under the sofa. The last two names, apparently written after she bought a new lipstick, were in a different color – more orange.”

“Why do you suppose she wrote with lipstick?” Riker asked. “Or is that question too naive?”

“For the same reason that people use lipstick to write farewell messages on bathroom mirrors: It’s handy. If Little Joe were a house-painter instead of a plumber, she might have used red enamel. Don’t overlook the significance of the color… The question next arises: Why did she keep a tally of her victims?”

“Because women like to make lists,” Riker said archly, and Amanda scowled at him.

“Because each murder boosted her ego. It was a scorecard of her victories in a private war she was waging.” Riker said, “I’ll bet she conked those guys with a lead pipe or a monkey wrench.”

“We can assume she conked her father with the tailgate of a dump truck. Mert and Clem are unaccounted for; there’ll be a search for their buried bodies on her property when the water recedes. Their trucks were found within walking distance of her private graveyard. Likewise, the mudslide where Buddy Yarrow went into the river was nearby.”

“Question!” said Riker. “Since the first four were reported as accidents or missing persons, when did you first suspect murder?”

“Subliminally, I suppose, when Koko started tapping his tail. He’d been watching the carpenter drive nails bang bang bang, and when the man failed to report for work, Koko’s tail started going tap tap tap.”

“Sounds like hogwash to me,” Amanda muttered. “How about a refill, Sherlock? The Squunk water was delicious, but don’t forget the bourbon this time.”

Qwilleran refreshed her drink but not without a wink at Riker. “Perhaps it was none of my business,” he said, “but I went around asking questions yesterday. Cecil Huggins remembers making a duplicate key for Joanna; it could have been a key to my cabin. The guys at the lumberyard remember Clem saying he was going to build a house on Hogback Road. The night bartender at the Shipwreck Tavern remembers the last time Mert came into the bar; Joanna was buying his drinks.”

“Convenient recall!” Amanda protested. “Hearsay! Circumstantial evidence!”

“I admit it, but you can be sure that the mortality rate for carpenters will decline now that Joanna – and Louise – are in custody.”

“Louise! Who’s Louise?” Riker asked.

“Ah! Now we come to the curious part. Little Joe didn’t know she was killing. She had invented another self – another girl – to do the dirty work. No doubt it was the only way she could cope with her intolerable homelife. For years both she and her sister were sexually abused by their father. When the younger girl killed herself – out of desperation, guilt, self-loathing, or whatever – it must have triggered a murderous hate in Joanna. Shortly after, “Louise” engineered the tailgate accident that killed Big Joe. Little Joe’s twisted reasoning would go something like this: Big Joe was a carpenter; he was a bad man; therefore all carpenters are bad men. It became the holy mission of “Louise” to wipe them out, one by one.”

“Shocking!” said Riker.

“That’s what serial killers are all about,” Qwilleran said. “Their motivation doesn’t make sense. That’s why they’re so hard to catch.”

“YOW!” came a loud voice from the bookshelf, and three heads turned to look.

Qwilleran said, “Koko no longer taps with his tail, now that the carpenter-killer has been apprehended. And I’m glad it’s over. My only regret is that the murderer turned out to be Little Joe.”

“What will happen to her?”

“Her fate now, I suppose, is in the hands of the courts and the doctors. It will take a lot of psychiatric treatment to straighten her out and get some answers to questions.”

In the moment of silence that followed, a faint but distinct sound came from the Conan Doyle shelf: tap tap tap.

Amanda crowed with delight. “I always knew you were a windbag, Qwill, but I like your moustache.”

After his guests had gone, Qwilleran made coffee for himself, poured a saucer of white grape juice for Koko, and gave Yum Yum a crumb of cheese. Then he sprawled in the big chair in his writing studio, while the Siamese arranged themselves on his desk in photogenic poses, waiting for the conversation to begin.

“Now that we’re back in Pickax,” he said, “I can’t believe we spent those three lunatic weeks in Mooseville. There’s something intoxicating about the atmosphere up there that distorts reality. It should be investigated by the narcs… Or even the EPA; it could be radioactivity from those UFOs.”

Koko squeezed his eyes in agreement.

“And the behavior of you two was enough to unhinge a rational mind. When you staged your catfit, were you really alarmed by the ringing phone? Or were you trying to distract the inspector in a tense moment?”

Koko blinked innocently, and Yum Yum yawned.

“I’d also like to know, young man, why you reacted to Russell Simms in such an ungentlemanly manner. You embarrassed me! It’s true there was something weird about her; she moved like a cat and had eyes like a cat, and she seemed to have a sixth sense… Hey, where are you going? Come back here!”

Koko had jumped down from the desk and was walking from the room with that particular stiff-legged gait that denoted supercilious disapproval. He paused in the doorway only long enough to switch his tail contemptuously – twice – before completing his haughty exit.

“I guess I offended him,” Qwilleran said to Yum Yum. “He’s temperamental, but we have to make allowances for genius, don’t we? Koko was obsessed by the trap door long before Iggy was murdered and even before Clem disappeared, and it wasn’t because of mice in the crawl space; he knew something abnormal was going to happen down there. Koko could teach Mrs. Ascott a thing or two.”

Yum Yum purred delicately.

“That rascal made a fool of me when Arch and Amanda were here. He’s developing a mischievous sense of humor. But I still maintain that his tail-tapping had something to do with the serial killings.”

“YOW!” Koko reappeared in the doorway, standing on his hind legs and pawing the air.

“I said s-e-r-i-a-l,” Qwilleran told him. “Not c-e-r-e-a-l.”

Both cats stared at him with expectation in every whisker.

Qwilleran looked at his watch. “Okay, you guys, it’s time for your bedtime treat!” He gave them a handful of Mildred’s crunchy breakfast food.

–––-

The Cat Who Went Underground (1989)

 

Jim Qwilleran packs up his old kit bag and his two Siamese cats, Koko and Yum Yum, for a sun-and-fun summer at his log cabin in Moose County. Their vacation starts out ominously with the disappearance of a handyman hired to patch up Qwilleran’s cabin. But the felines really start throwing catfits when they come across a dead body or two…A serial killer may be right under Koko’s nose, and now this ingenious Siamese must dig deeper to clear poor Qwilleran of suspicion—and dig up the motive for a catastrophic crime.

BOOK: The Cat Who Went Underground
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