'Til Dice Do Us Part (18 page)

BOOK: 'Til Dice Do Us Part
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I’m ashamed to admit I felt a little left out from this illustrious list. What was I doing here anyway? I thought of the Tai Chi class I was missing. This very minute I could be Grasping the Bird’s Tail or slinking through Snake Creeps In.
“Care to explain once more—for the record—why your fingerprints happen to be on the murder weapon? Let’s start with you, Mr. Lewis.”
I gave Bill a sympathetic look. He was on the hot seat and, from the look on his face, wasn’t too happy about it.
“Why wouldn’t my prints be on it? It’s my gun—I told you that before.”
“And so you did.” He made a show of noting this in his ubiquitous black book. “And what about you, Mr. Mason? How do you explain the fact your fingerprints are all over the barrel?”
“Since when is looking a crime?” Bernie picked at a ragged cuticle. “My brother-in-law’s always bragging about his Smith and Wesson. Wanted to see what was such a big deal.”
“Me, too,” Gus muttered. “Just curious, is all.”
The sheriff noted this, then turned his attention to Monica and Rita. “What about you ladies? You the curious types, too?”
“Of course my fingerprints are on the gun,” Monica replied, sounding defensive and frightened at the same time.
“It was part of my job.”
A dark brow lifted. “And your job was . . .”
Monica raised her nose in the air. “I’m the prop princess.”
“Mistress,” I hissed. “Mistress, not princess.” You’d think Monica would realize by now the task didn’t come with a tiara.
The sheriff ignored my outburst as if it hadn’t occurred. “What about you, Miz Larsen? Handlin’ the gun part of your job as well?”
Rita looked discomfited—a rare occurrence. Normally it took a lot to rattle her. I compared her to the
Queen Mary
—big and stable, not likely to sink in a storm. “I, um, like to keep things neat. I may have picked up the gun after the shooting and put it with the rest of the props.”
“May have . . . ?”
Rita gave a curt nod. “That’s right. How was I supposed to know Lance was really dead and not just pretending?”
He gave her a hard, unblinking stare. “Guess that’s a tricky call when someone has a bullet hole in their chest and stops breathin’.”
“For crying out loud,” I protested. “Lance was a professional corpse. He got paid good money to look dead.
CSI
has the best corpses on TV. You’d know that if you ever watched TV.”
“I’ll take that under advisement, ma’am,” the sheriff replied, his tone droll. “Now let’s get on to the next item up for business: gunshot residue.”
“Keep me out of this.” Bernie held up both hands as though warding off an invisible enemy. “I’ll admit, I looked at the gun, but no way could I have gunshot residue on my hands. I handled the gun
before
Ledeaux was shot, not after.”
“Settle down, Mason,” the sheriff growled. “Your hands tested negative, but the others . . .”
His coal black gaze crept around the table, resulting in a lot of squirming, a lot of shifting. Yup, I said to myself, he’d have made a good nun. If a person could make adults twitch, fifth graders wouldn’t stand a prayer.
“What about you, Mr. Lewis? Care to explain?”
“How many times do I have to remind you, Sheriff, the gun was
mine
? I handed it to Ledeaux personally that very morning right after cleaning it.”
The sheriff’s scowl deepened. “I hear that right? You say you cleaned it?”
Bill nodded. “You heard me.”
Although Sheriff Wiggins didn’t look pleased at Bill’s response, he jotted it all down. “Let’s move on, shall we? Miz Larsen, I suppose you’re goin’ to claim you got residue on your hands in an effort to keep things neat and tidy.”
Rita’s face was stony. “More than likely that’s how it happened.”
The spotlight shifted to me. “And you, Miz McCall, how did you happen to come in contact with gunshot residue?”
“I have no idea,” I said, surprised at finding my name on the list.
“Did you at any time handle the weapon?”
I replayed the events immediately following the shooting. “No,” I said at last. “Not that I recall.”
He drummed his fingers against the metal table. Tap, tap, tap. Slow, incessant, irritating to the max, the sound was like a leaky faucet at two a.m. “Are you telling me GSR—as they say in the trade—flew through the air and, by chance, happened to land on your hands?” Not waiting for a reply, he went on as though ruminating. “Another strange finding. Miz Ledeaux’s hands were negative, almost like she washed them. Or wiped them clean.”
Just like in the Sunday comics, a lightbulb went on inside my brain.
“Judgin’ from your expression, I can see your memory is returnin’.”
Coming back like a bad dream would be more like it.
I debated what to say, but since we’d all seen Claudia pull the trigger, I decided there wasn’t any harm in relating how I’d probably come into contact with GSR. Just hearing the acronym—GSR—gave my confidence a boost and reminded me I wasn’t a rank amateur when it came to crime solving.
“Once we realized Lance was really dead and not faking it, I went to comfort Claudia.” I envisioned myself on the witness stand, calm, poised, relating my account before a packed courtroom in an intelligent, precise fashion while the jurors listened with rapt attention. I’m ready for my close-up, Mr. DeMille. “Claudia appeared to be in shock. When I took hold of her hands, they were cold as ice. We sat her in a chair. Then I went to get her some water. She was shaking so badly, the water spilled, and she wiped her hands on her slacks to dry them.”
“Mmm.”
That it? Mmm?
The sheriff made a production out of writing everything I’d said in that darn book of his. I’d love to get a peek at his notes. Then again, they might prove boring.
Miz McCall twiddled her thumbs. Mr. Lewis shrugged his shoulders. Miz Pulaski failed to make eye contact
. Etc., etc. You get my drift.
Rita stared pointedly at her Bulova. “Are we done yet, Sheriff?”
“You have somethin’ more important waitin’?”
Mama always said you catch more flies with sugar than you do with vinegar. This seemed a good time to take the old adage out for a stroll. I smiled sweetly. “You’re a busy man, Sheriff Wiggins. My friends and I don’t want to take up any more of your valuable time. We’ve answered your questions. Unless we’re under arrest . . . ?”
“Temptin’ as that may be . . .”
Bad Jack snapped his portfolio shut. “Since my client’s already been charged with manslaughter, isn’t this meeting a little superfluous, Sheriff?”
The sheriff remained unruffled. “I’m well aware, sir, we’re not at a loss for witnesses who’ll testify they saw Miz Ledeaux fire the fatal shot. That said, I don’t want some slick city lawyer tellin’ the jury my department failed to do its job properly. I’m a man who likes to dot my i’s and cross my t’s.”
Claudia rose to her feet, her voice shrill. “How many times do I have to tell you I never intended to kill Lance? Why can’t you believe it was all a terrible accident? That somehow a bullet left in the chamber went unnoticed?”
“Miz Claudia, please,” BJ remonstrated.
Claudia jerked free of his attempt to catch her sleeve. “I planned to divorce the bastard. Not kill him.”
The sheriff didn’t blink, didn’t miss a beat. “So you admit to havin’ marital problems with the deceased?”
I heard a collective intake of breath.
Claudia, my friend, what have you done?
BJ sprang to his feet. “My client admits no such thing. Even a blind man could see the dear woman’s overwrought as a result of your constant badgerin’.”
Claudia flung her head back and laughed. “I’m done mourning the son of a bitch. Should have known better than to marry a man as phony as his dyed hair and fake tan.”
BJ turned to his client. “Unless you plan to find another attorney, Miz Ledeaux, I advise you not to say another word.”
Claudia seemed about to object, but one look at her attorney and she wisely kept silent. Right before our very eyes, Badgeley Jack Davenport IV changed from affable to formidable. For the first time in our brief acquaintance, I could see how the man had earned the sobriquet
Bad Jack
. If I ever
accidentally
shot and killed a sleazy con man, he’d be first on my list of lawyers.
Bad Jack tucked his gold ballpoint into the inner pocket of his suit. “Finished, Sheriff?”
“For now.” Sheriff Wiggins flipped his notebook shut but made no move to rise. He pinned us in our places with a hard, penetrating stare. “Accordin’ to the evidence from the state crime lab, I could consider y’all suspects along with Miz Ledeaux. Y’all had means and opportunity. Only thing lackin’ is motive. Once I find that, the case is pretty well sewed up.”
Motive? Oh, boy! Claudia was up the proverbial river without a paddle. Up the river, in this case, being the state pen.
Chapter 22
I’d eaten my margherita pizza in blissful solitude. I’d invited Krystal to join me, but she wanted to read her scene a final time before the audition. She’d vanished into her room with the script in one hand, a sleeve of soda crackers in the other. I’d no sooner put the last of the dinner dishes in the dishwasher than the phone rang.
“Kate, it’s for you,” Krystal yelled from down the hall after picking up the extension. “Some woman wants to sell you something. Want me to tell her you’re not home?”
The thought was tempting. Ever since I’d written a check to the college alumni association, they’d been pestering me for another on a daily basis. They’d zeroed in on the most inopportune times: dinnertime, nap time, bathroom time. Patience, I reminded myself. The caller was likely some hapless student trying to earn beer money.
“I’ll take it.” I sighed the sigh of the martyred, ready to be polite but firm as I picked up the phone. “Hello.”
“Mother, is that you?”
“Yes, dear, whom did you expect?” My daughter, Jennifer, lives in California. Not just California, mind you, but Brentwood, home to stars and celebs. She lives there with her husband and former nerd, Jason Jarrod. Jason discovered contacts and Armani shortly after certain powers that be discovered he could forge a contract more binding than Cheddar cheese in a nursing home. Jen and Jason, along with my two adorable granddaughters, Juliette and Jillian—the Four Jays as I call them—lead a charmed life. At least, they do if listening to Jennifer is any indication.
“You sound strange, Mother. Who answered the phone, one of your gambling buddies?”
I’ve tried, but without success, to explain bunco to my daughter. She equates a simple dice game with a den of iniquity involving high-stakes gambling. She fears I’ll lose my retirement pension and end up on the street as a bag lady. “No, sweetheart. It was Krystal, my houseguest.”
“I don’t remember your having any friends named Krystal. Do I know her? What’s her last name?”
Jen was firing more questions than I had the time—or inclination—to answer. “Krystal is someone I’ve recently met. She’s staying with me temporarily until she gets back on her feet.”
“Feet? What’s wrong with her feet? Is the woman crippled?”
Even as a child, Jen had an overactive imagination. Her close proximity to Hollywood seems to have aggravated the condition.
“There’s nothing wrong with Krystal’s feet, dear. It was only a figure of speech.” I lowered my voice, not wanting Krystal to overhear. “The young woman’s been having a run of bad luck. I asked her to stay with me while her car is being repaired and until she earns enough money for a fresh start in Myrtle Beach.”
“I can’t believe you invited a perfect stranger into your home.”
I chuckled. “Trust me, Jen, Krystal’s far from ‘perfect.’ ”
“You know what I mean, Mother. This woman could turn out to be a serial killer, preying on elderly women.”
“I thought we agreed the term ‘elderly’ doesn’t apply when you’re talking about me,” I reminded her sternly. Between Jen’s referring to me by the
E
word and Steven’s sending me literature on assisted living centers, a lesser person might actually begin to feel old. How that felt, I haven’t a clue.
“Besides, Jen,” I continued, “it’s a well-known fact most serial killers are men.” There, that tidbit was designed to make her feel better about my roommate.
“Sorry, that salient point slipped my mind.”
“No need for sarcasm, Jennifer Louise.” She knows I mean business whenever I resort to using her middle name. She absolutely hates the name Louise, which happened to belong to Jim’s mother. I console her by telling her we could have named her Bertha after my mother. That usually stops further complaints.
Clear across a continent, I heard a sigh. “You worry me, Mother. Inviting a stranger into your home doesn’t show sound judgment on your part.”
“Everything’s fine, dear. No need to worry.” I glanced at the clock, which showed six fifteen. “I can’t talk long, honey. Auditions are scheduled for seven.”
“For that little show you and your friends are putting on? I thought auditions had finished a long time ago.”
Did I hear a yawn in the background? Time to wake her up. “We need to replace both leads because Claudia shot Lance.”
“Shot? As in shot dead?”
“Claudia’s been a wreck even though she’s out on bail.” I smirked. Jennifer wasn’t yawning now. Knowing my daughter’s penchant to overreact, I’d purposely avoided mentioning the incident unless provoked. I hoped I hadn’t gone and put my foot in my mouth, but it was too late now. “The whole thing was an unfortunate accident.”
Do wishes really come true? Or were those simply song lyrics?
“Bill and I were just saying the other day . . .”
“Bill! Who is Bill?” Jen’s voice rose. “Mother, are you seeing someone?”
Where my children are concerned, I’d kept Bill under wraps so to speak—along with Lance’s untimely demise. After all, I’m a grown woman. I don’t need to report my love life to my children. Take my son, for example. Ask Steven about his dating life, and I get the deep freeze. He’s entitled to his privacy—and I’m entitled to mine. Quid pro quo. The eternal question: Why do some things work in theory only?

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