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Eat, Pray, Die Mystery Box Set

Page 48

by Chelsea Field


  “That must be why the Taste Society chose me to protect the WECS Club president, Vanessa Madison,” I said. “Who are you here for?”

  A frown marred Emily’s forehead, confirming my hope she was working for a lower-ranking client.

  “Anyway,” I continued. “I’d better be off. You know how the Taste Society doesn’t like fraternizing among Shades.” I pushed past her and retreated down the stairs.

  4

  My feet were killing me by the time I got home. Why I had to dress up and wear heels when I was supposed to be invisible anyway was beyond my understanding.

  I’d cleaned my shirt as best as I could under the circumstances and then borrowed an apron from the waitstaff to cover the mess, but I could still smell the seafood velouté. And while it had been delicious to eat, no one wants to smell like a fish market.

  I stripped the offending garment off only to find that the scent had soaked into my skin like a nasty perfume. Great. Looks like I’d need to have yet another shower today. I’d have to go to a pharmacy and get eye drops as well. I’d never stared, too worried to blink, for so long in my life.

  I was grateful that my housemate Oliver was away in England. He was good company, but sometimes nothing beat being alone. Well, alone with a cat, I amended when Meow wound her lithe, tiger-striped body around my ankles. She’d probably been drawn by the fishy odor. I picked her up and hugged her to my chest anyway. “You and I are going to have the best night tonight. I’ll get you some food, jump in the shower, and then it’s you, me, bed, and a book, what do you say?” She head-butted my chin in agreement.

  When I felt the rasp of her tongue on my seafood-scented skin, I put her down and rummaged for the can opener. Someone knocked on the door.

  Damn. I threw the stinky blouse back over my head and answered it.

  “Finally you’re home,” Etta said. “You need to come with me.”

  “I need to go to bed,” I corrected.

  She put a hand on one hip and gave me the devil eye. “Oh, you’d like that, wouldn’t you? Poor Abe is curled up in some jail cell while his wife and daughter are crying themselves to sleep with worry, and you need to go to bed. I don’t think so. Not until you’ve looked his daughter in the eye and explained to her why you won’t be helping bring her daddy home.”

  I rolled my eyes up to the ceiling. Ugh, I needed to get a broom out to get rid of those cobwebs. “This is blackmail you know.”

  She grabbed my arm and pulled me toward the door. “I know.”

  I wasn’t a complete pushover. I fed Meow first.

  Sitting in the passenger seat of Etta’s 1970s, buttercup-yellow Dodge Charger, I closed my eyes. In part because they were so tired, and in part because her driving made me nervous.

  “Now, Izzy, Mr. Black’s wife and daughter are… special. I need you to be on your best behavior.”

  My eyelids sprang open. I’d never received a warning to behave from Etta. Of the pair of us, she was far more likely to act badly, and almost every conversation we had included her telling me to let loose, get a greater sense of adventure, and live a little.

  “No matter how you feel about Abe, you need to keep it to yourself,” she continued. “To these two, he’s their adored, loving father and husband. And you better keep the lid on it tight. Joy, that’s his daughter, is a real smart cookie. Real smart. You know she earned herself a scholarship to the swanky Frederick Academy? She’ll pick up on any hints you drop.”

  Wasn’t that where Vanessa’s daughter went? If so, the scholarship must’ve been worth thousands. I felt chastened and hoped I could hide my feelings adequately. “Got it.”

  We drove in silence for a few minutes before Etta broke it again. “I don’t know why you hold such a grudge anyway. Abe never actually hurt you.”

  Only because I ran away as fast as I could. And then made a bargain with him through a window with a Taser between us.

  Okay, he’d been apologetic about it, and most bruisers probably wouldn’t have struck a bargain with me, let alone honored it. But it’s hard to think well of someone after the terror of being chased down the street, certain you’re about to have your bones broken one by one. I’d always disliked jogging, but now I was scarred for life, so it would be his fault if I got fat too.

  Even pushing my feelings about Mr. Black aside, this whole thing reeked of being a bad idea. It was one thing to assist Connor—a professional investigator who had agreements with the police—to investigate a case. Especially one I had personal involvement in. But it was quite another to work without any professional guidance or approval and paired with an amateur septuagenarian sleuth who was entirely too fond of adventure and her Glock.

  I shuddered to imagine what Police Commander Hunt would have to say about it should he find out. He’d put me in handcuffs for interference quicker than Meow could catch a cockroach. Not that there was any reason for him to find out, but still. And if Mr. Black didn’t murder the victim, then someone else did. Someone who wouldn’t appreciate us poking around. Someone who had a track record of murdering people they didn’t appreciate.

  Connor was right. “Absolutely not” should be my answer. I spent the rest of the trip steeling myself to stay strong no matter what Etta had planned for me.

  Mr. Black’s home was, to put it nicely, a pile of crap. It was a small, squat building in Vermont Square that needed a new roof, a new fence, and a new coat of paint. A beat-up, maroon Dodge minivan from a former century sat out front.

  Contrary to Etta’s prediction, Mr. Black’s wife and daughter were not crying in their beds, but they both had anxiety pinching their faces despite their efforts to hide it. Mrs. Black, or Hallie as she’d asked me to call her, was in a wheelchair, and their thirteen-year-old daughter Joy had a black eye and a bandaged wrist. For a brief second I wondered whether it was for show to garner my sympathy. Then I shoved the notion away, ashamed to have thought it. As if my scanty detective skills were worth the effort.

  “Hallie and I will put the kettle on,” Etta said. “Why don’t you let Joy show you what she’s been working at?”

  Joy gave me a shy smile. “Did you wanna see?” She was small and skinny and seemed to be made up of all arms and legs. The exact opposite of her father. She wore her hair in a tight braid that was too severe for her thin face and large brown eyes. Although now at the end of a long day, some less cooperative tendrils had slipped free.

  “I’d love to,” I said.

  It was impossible not to appreciate the differences between Vanessa’s daughter and Joy. I hoped the posh school wouldn’t tarnish her sweetness.

  She led me out to the backyard and switched on the outdoor lights. There appeared to be some sort of obstacle course set up on the dried-out lawn. There were a bunch of solid-looking platforms of varying sizes and angles made from packing crates, a sturdy picnic bench, several bars including an old swing set without a swing, and a ten-foot section of wall mounted to a tree.

  “Watch this.” Joy peeled off her faded purple jacket and sprinted at the first bar which she leaped up and grabbed, then swung, twisted, and launched herself onto a nearby platform like an acrobat. Except instead of sticking the landing and taking a bow, she rolled with the momentum and leaped onto the next platform, then threw herself at the wall, which she managed to run up in defiance of gravity. She used the wall to change direction and then ran in a series of precise leaps from the picnic bench to several of the platforms, followed by a bar that I would’ve slipped off even without her speed, and finished with another acrobatic flip.

  I clapped as she landed and jogged over to me, her face flushed.

  “It’s called parkour,” she explained. “It might seem crazy, but there’s real strategy and technique and discipline involved—like a non-combative martial art. I love it!”

  “Is that how you hurt your wrist?”

  “Uh, yeah. Normally I’d do more swings and stuff, except I’m meant to be resting the sprain. But it’s not that dangerous if you don
’t do it on rooftops and that kinda thing. Mom and Dad let me practice since it’s the one type of physical exercise I’m interested in. It challenges my mind and my body at the same time, and I don’t like team sports or anything. Well, I’m pretty sure. I’m not that popular at school, so I wouldn’t get picked anyway.” The last admission had her gaze dropping to the ground, her scuffed-up sneaker playing in the dirt.

  “Well I’m impressed,” I said. “What did you say it was called?”

  Her eyes lit up again. “Parkour! Did you know it was developed from military obstacle course training?”

  After Joy finished enlightening me about this whole new world of exercise, we returned to the kitchen for the promised cups of tea.

  “He hates that job,” Hallie told me when we’d all settled around the dining table. Like her kitchen, she was small and neat, used to making the most of what she’d been given. And she believed her husband would never have been arrested if it wasn’t for his profession as a bruiser. “You know the first time he had to hurt someone, he came home and cried?”

  I felt a stab of disbelief. “Then why does he do it?”

  Her voice cracked. “For us. He does it for his family. He got laid off from his factory job at General Motors three years ago and couldn’t find another position. He applied for anything and everything, but twelve months passed, and we couldn’t remortgage the house anymore. We sold it, moved here, and still couldn’t put food on the table. When the debt collectors came knocking, they made a comment about taking Joy as collateral, and he threw them out on their asses and sent them running home with their tails between their legs. Their boss offered him the job.”

  “Mom, swear jar.” Joy pushed a battered porcelain pig onto the table using her one good hand. The parkour demonstration must have taken a toll on her injured wrist.

  Hallie tearfully pulled a coin out of her pocket and popped it in. “Sorry, honey.”

  Joy patted her mom’s shoulder. “It’s okay. It’ll be okay. They’ll get him out of this, won’t you?”

  She turned her wide eyes to me, and I had the distinct impression she’d figured out what was going on and was playing me like a fool. Nevertheless, it worked.

  “All right. Tell me about the case.”

  It was Joy who answered. “Dad was just in the wrong place at the wrong time. Mr. Bergström, that’s his boss, told him to go beat the victim up. So he did. The coroner placed the time of death about an hour later. A nosy old man across the road saw Dad leaving, so there’s an eyewitness and his DNA on the vic. But it doesn’t prove he did it. They don’t have a motive or a murder weapon. It’s all circumstantial. And Dad would never kill someone. He doesn’t enjoy hurting people, but the police like him for it anyway. They’re prejudiced because of his job, but that’s wrong. That’s not what the law says. But humans are imperfect, so we need to accept it and then convince them otherwise.”

  I heard my teeth click together as I shut my gaping jaw.

  “You must think I’m crazy to let my daughter know all this,” Hallie said, wiping her eyes again. “But when she’s determined, I can’t stop her from finding anything out, and I’d prefer she learned it in openness and safety rather than whatever nefarious means she’d cook up otherwise.” She sent a fond, weary look at Joy.

  Joy’s eyes were still fastened on me.

  Fool that I am, I found myself saying, “We can’t promise anything, but we’ll do what we can to make sure the right person goes to prison for this.”

  My last thought as my head hit the pillow was how I was going to break the news to Connor.

  5

  It turned out that I didn’t have to work out how to tell Connor. At least not straight away. He texted me to say he wouldn’t be able to make our afternoon date.

  I was disappointed, but it was the nature of our jobs. Both of us were essentially on call twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week, which was why the last two days—Christmas, which we’d spent with his family, and our lazy afternoon yesterday—had been so special. Even if they did involve a poisoning, an intimidating new client, and a lack of any real conversation.

  I booted up Oliver’s laptop with my morning cup of tea and Googled the murder victim’s name. Michael Watts was the CEO of a lucrative wholesale distribution company that sold sporting equipment to retailers all over the country. The company had been founded by Michael’s grandfather and then passed down the family line until Michael was in charge.

  A deeper search revealed that two warehouses had shut down in the last year, suggesting that it wasn’t going so well. Maybe that’s how he’d racked up enough debt for someone to send Mr. Black after him. He could be living beyond his means to avoid public humiliation or acquiring cash off the books to buoy up the company. But who had lent him the money? And why would they hire a bruiser to scare him into repaying the debt only to kill him an hour later?

  His corporate profile showed a handsome, athletic-looking man with a bleached-white smile. He’d won a local golf tournament last year, and his name also came up alongside various sport-related donations or sponsorships.

  I went to his Facebook page next. His privacy settings didn’t allow me to see much, but there was a photo of him, arm slung around a dainty brunette, and a teenager I assumed was their son. A few minutes later, I’d managed to find both of their profiles too. His wife, Nicole Watts, was a member of the WECS Club, and his son, also named Michael, went to the Frederick Academy like every other WECS Club member’s child I’d heard about. I guessed that the club either recruited most of its members from mothers at the Frederick Academy, or its members were so competitive that sending their children to one of the most expensive schools in America was par for the course.

  Out of interest, I looked up the annual tuition. Then I wished I hadn’t. It was forty grand a year. Per child.

  That was even more concerning when I converted it to Australian dollars.

  If I was lucky, the links between the WECS Club and Frederick Academy could work in my favor. Maybe I’d overhear some useful gossip while eavesdropping for Vanessa. Or maybe the WECS Club women were so self-absorbed that the murder of someone they knew would garner only fleeting attention in the lead up to the Scandalous Cause calendar.

  The news coverage of Michael Watts’s death didn’t say much beyond he’d been found shot in his home Christmas Eve and that police were investigating. I wondered which unfortunate detective had gotten the Christmas shift. There was another article from last night mentioning that they had a suspect in custody. It named the suspect as Abraham Black, but there were no helpful details illuminating why the police believed he’d done it and whether they’d explored any other avenues.

  Amateur sleuths in stories always had chatty contacts at the local police station, but the one policeman I knew personally was Police Commander Hunt—the top-secret LAPD liaison assigned to the Taste Society. After working with him on the last case, I was pretty sure he’d prefer to shoot me rather than help me. He’d certainly throw my ass in jail if he found out I was interfering with one of his cases. I knew because he’d done it before.

  The last thing I looked up was Michael’s obituary. It was the run-of-the-mill line about how he was a loving father and husband who was survived by his wife and son that got to me. Such an ordinary line, but after the death of my client less than two weeks ago and seeing the devastation it caused his mom and best friend, I knew how much grief that short statement hid behind it.

  I didn’t let myself think about what it would mean if Mr. Black really was responsible for this man’s death. Instead, I sifted through the usual motives. Money. Power. Love or sex. Or secrets.

  It didn’t help. Michael Watts had power and money (albeit perhaps less of it than he was used to), he had a wife, which meant the love and sex motives were on the table, and he could have stumbled across a big secret. Any of them could apply.

  The one positive was that none of them seemed to fit Mr. Black. But if he wasn’t guilty—a point I wa
s unconvinced on—how the heck were we going to find out who was?

  As far as I could see, we had two avenues for rustling up other potential suspects. One was to learn more about the victim. That would be challenging since there was no way I was about to question his grieving widow and the wealthy crowd wasn’t going to talk when we didn’t even have a PI license for credibility. The other was to find out who else the police had looked into. That would also be tricky with a sad lack of any handy-dandy contacts.

  I closed the laptop. Mr. Black’s arraignment hearing was scheduled late this morning, so maybe he’d be able to tell us more after he’d been released on bail. Until then, I’d have to explain to Etta that we were at a dead end.

  “Dead end? What nonsense. Didn’t you hear Joy mention a neighbor who saw Abe leaving the Watts’ residence around the time of the murder?”

  “Sure, but we don’t know which neighbor, and why would they talk to us?”

  Etta shook her head. “Have you never read a cozy mystery? There’s a nosy neighbor on every street, and I’m willing to bet that it was them who was the witness. Michael was shot in the middle of the day. Who else has time to peer out their window and take note of strangers coming and going on the day before Christmas for goodness’ sake? A nosy person, that’s who. And the thing about nosy people is that they’re bored, and they’re bored because they’re lonely. And you know what lonely people like? Someone to talk to.”

  I wondered if Etta was such an expert on this because she was in part describing herself. She knew everything that happened in our apartment building, she often complained about being bored, and she certainly liked to talk. Yet she was so smart and self-assured that I’d never thought of her as lonely before.

 

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