In Dog We Trust (Golden Retriever Mysteries)

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In Dog We Trust (Golden Retriever Mysteries) Page 30

by Neil S. Plakcy


  I took a breath. “Or maybe they didn’t involve Jackie until Caroline Kelly called Melissa’s cell phone and said she was from Quaker State Bank, and that she was investigating the account under Edith’s name at the Easton Branch.”

  “Tony Rinaldi went to the house Jackie was renting in Leighville yesterday. She’s gone. He got the landlord to let him in, and it’s clear she’s flown the coop. Then he called her mother’s house. Her mother says she hasn’t seen her for a couple of weeks or talked to her for the last couple of days. I called up to Union and got a detective to go around and talk to the neighbors, and they said she was there over the weekend but she’s gone now. She left the dog with her mother.”

  “I’ve got an APB out on her vehicle, and I’ve got a guy seeing her brother at Fairton later today, trying to connect her to Arsene Philippe.”

  “It must have been Jackie’s black SUV I saw speeding away after Caroline was shot. I don’t if she pulled the trigger herself, or if she drove Menno there, or just gave him the gun and the keys to the car.”

  “She’s still responsible,” Rick said.

  “Once Caroline was dead, they probably thought they were clear,” I said. “But then I entered the picture. I discovered Caroline’s body, saw the speeding SUV, and adopted Rochester. I began helping Edith figure out her finances, at the same time as I was helping Rick look for Caroline’s killer. It took me too long to realize that the two investigations were connected; if I’d known sooner, perhaps Melissa and Menno might still be alive.”

  Rick reached out and squeezed my shoulder. “You can’t worry about that stuff,” he said.

  “The key was Melissa’s cell number—which she used when she opened the fraudulent account at Quaker State Bank, and which had showed up on Caroline’s phone bill. If Melissa had never called me for advice on her research paper, it would have taken us even longer to make the connection.”

  “Why do you think Jackie killed Melissa and Menno?” Rick asked.

  “They must have gotten scared after Edith and I started the investigation at Quaker State Bank. Even though Edith’s money had been moved out of the account, they must have been frightened of discovery. And Jackie knew that if they were arrested, they’d point to her.”

  “That’s if we assume she’s the person responsible,” Rick said. “Assuming she got them the gun, and shared in the proceeds of the theft.”

  “If she got arrested, her academic career would be derailed, and she’d go to jail. I’ll be seeing Cyrus behind bars was a powerful motive to stay out of prison.” I shuddered. “If I’d known what prison was going to be like, I would sure have been more careful about what I did.”

  “So she killed the two of them, thinking that there were no clues that would link her to them, or to the thefts from Edith.”

  I nodded. “Just to be sure, she tried to run me off the road when I was walking with Rochester, and she smashed Arsene’s motorcycle along the same road, removing the only other person who could link her to the Glock.”

  The one thing I couldn’t understand was why Jackie had sent the chocolate biscuits to Rochester. What had the dog ever done to hurt her? But then that, too, fell into place. “The last time I saw Jackie, I told her all about Rochester’s role in digging up clues to solve Caroline’s murder. To finish things off, she sent him the biscuits.”

  “When we catch her, she’s going down for murder, fraud, theft—a lot more than just trying to poison a dog.”

  “My dog.”

  There must have been something in my eyes, or my tone of voice, but Rick took the materials on his desk and put them into separate evidence bags. “I’ll get an analysis of the dog biscuit,” he said. “You never know, the way attorneys are these days, and judges, and juries, we need every piece of evidence we can get.”

  “Thanks. I appreciate it.”

  I was just about to leave when my cell phone rang, playing the first few bars of the Baha Men singing “Who Let the Dogs Out.”

  Rick frowned, but when I flipped open the phone I saw from the caller ID that it was Jackie. I held up a hand to Rick and said, “Hey, Jackie, what’s up?”

  He leaned in close so he could hear her side of the conversation.

  “Samson’s driving me nuts,” she said. “All he wants to do is play, and I’ve got to get him worn out so I can work on my thesis. Do you feel like bringing Rochester up to the dog park for a play date?”

  Rick was nodding his head. “Sure,” I said. “My schedule’s pretty open today. What works for you?”

  We settled on noon and I hung up. “What do you think she wants with me?”

  “Maybe she’s checking to see if you got the biscuits,” he said.

  “When Tony called her mother’s house, what did he say?”

  “He said he was investigating the death of a student she had been close to, and wanted to ask her some questions.”

  I drummed my fingers on the desktop. “So maybe she doesn’t know for sure that you suspect her,” I said. “I told her that I was helping you find out who killed Caroline. Maybe she thinks I know something about the investigation.”

  We arranged to meet up with Tony Rinaldi at the Leighville station at ten, and Rick asked, “Where’s the dog now?”

  “He’s at the vet. I’m on my way to pick him up.”

  “Bring him with you.” When I started to protest, he said, “We don’t want to spook her. If you show up without the dog she’ll know something’s up.”

  “But she won’t have her dog,” I said. “Samson’s at her mother’s.”

  “This woman sent your dog poisoned biscuits. Do you want her to go to jail?”

  “You know I do.”

  “Then get the dog and bring him with you.”

  I hesitated. It was one thing to put myself in danger. Assuming Jackie had killed Melissa and Menno, she might have it in for me, too. And I knew she held a grudge against my big, sweet golden retriever. How could I drag him into trouble?

  And how could I risk my own life, knowing that he depended on me?

  “Rick, I’m not sure,” I started.

  “I need your help,” he said. “We’ve got to trick this woman into showing her face so we can arrest her. Don’t worry, I’ll be right there. Just like with Chris and Karina, OK? You don’t have anything to worry about.”

  Easy for him to say. But I knew how important it was to catch Jackie, and make her pay for everything she had done. So I left the police station and went to get my dog.

  Chapter 39 - Secrets Come Out

  When the tech brought Rochester out to me in the lobby, he was back to his old self, jumping as soon as he saw me. I got down to my knees and buried my head in his soft, golden fur. “Did you miss me, boy? You all better now?”

  His enthusiasm was all the proof I needed.

  I rolled the windows down as we drove up to Leighville. Rochester stuck his head out, enjoying the breeze, and I could almost pretend we were just out for a fun drive in the country. Then we got to the police station and I had to face the fact that I was about to put myself, and my dog, in danger.

  The same desk sergeant was on duty. “Hi, boy,” he said, ruffling Rochester’s ears. “How’ve you been?”

  My traitorous dog looked up at him with adoring eyes, and the sergeant agreed to take care of him until we were ready to leave.

  Tony had assembled a bunch of cops, in uniform and plain clothes, in the station classroom, and he briefed everyone on the details of the case. He’d mobilized the county task force, including state cops, local departments, and county sheriff’s deputies.

  With military precision, he laid out who was going to be stationed where, and how he expected the meeting to play out. There would be cops in the woods, a couple of young guys in plain clothes on the lawn of Birthday House, and more in vehicles in the dog park lot.

  “Professor Levitan is going to get to the park in advance of his rendezvous time, and be playing with his dog in the enclosed area. As soon as the suspect pulls
up and gets out of her SUV, we move in.”

  The gravity with which the cops approached the situation calmed me down a little, but I was still nervous as I drove from the station to the dog park, and Rochester seemed to sense it and want to make me feel better. He lay his head on my lap so that I could stroke his golden fur with my right hand.

  He recognized the dog park as we pulled into the parking lot, and he was scrambling around, positioned to exit as soon as I opened the door, when my cell phone rang. Checking the display, I saw it was Jackie.

  “I’m waiting at the house for a plumber,” she said. “I can’t leave right now. Can you bring Rochester over here? The boys can play in the yard.”

  I didn’t know what she was trying, but I couldn’t let her get away. “Sure. Give me your address again.” I grabbed the pen and pad I keep in the glove compartment, but Rochester started trying to climb over me. “Rochester, down!” To Jackie I said, “He’s excited.”

  “I’m sure he’ll have fun.” She gave me her address and I wrote it down.

  “Be there in a few,” I said.

  As soon as I hung up I called Rick and told him what had happened. “So you can just go over there and arrest her, right?” I asked. “My part is done.”

  “She called you from her cell, right?”

  “Yup.”

  “So she could be anywhere. This could be a trap to flush us out. We need a visual, Steve.”

  “You want me to go to her house?” I felt my voice squeak.

  “Drive slowly. I’ll get Tony to get the troops mustered.”

  He hung up and I looked at Rochester. His tongue hung open and he looked so happy. Jackie had tried to kill him; I owed it to him, as well as to Caroline, and Menno and Melissa, to see that she went to jail.

  I cruised through the Eastern campus. Spring was bursting out all over—trees in full bloom, manicured beds bursting with pink, red, white and purple flowers, rolling green lawns. The campus was deserted, just a couple of staff members moving between the buildings. I remembered a summer I’d spent working on campus, how peaceful it had been.

  Eastern was such a beautiful place, dedicated to higher pursuits. A murderer didn’t belong there. I looked around to see if there were cops following me, but I couldn’t see any. I figured they were all getting into position around Jackie’s house.

  At the top of the hill I turned onto Main Street. When I was four or five blocks from Jackie’s I pulled over and stopped the car, then called Rick’s cell phone.

  “We have a visual on the house,” he said. “There’s no car in the driveway. I think she’s faking us out.”

  “What do you want me to do?”

  “Sit tight. See if she calls you.”

  As I snapped the phone shut, I heard Jackie’s voice. “You sold me out, Steve. That wasn’t a smart move.”

  Rochester turned at the sound of her voice, and scrambled to his paws on my lap so he could look over me. I turned, too, and saw Jackie standing beside me, a gun aimed straight at my head. “Jackie,” I said, and my voice squeaked again.

  “You had to go messing around,” she said. “Things just got out of hand, but I was covering my tracks. Nobody would have ever connected me to the money if you hadn’t stuck your nose in.”

  I looked around, hoping that the police were somewhere in the area. A few hundred yards behind me I saw Jackie’s black SUV parked alongside the road.

  “I hate to have to do this, but I can’t let you give evidence against me.” She aimed the pistol and released the safety.

  A series of shots rang out, and my body shuddered. I grabbed onto Rochester and started to cry.

  Then I realized I was all right.

  I opened my eyes, and there were half a dozen cops converging from all sides. Jackie lay on the ground, the gun a few inches from her hand.

  My cell phone started to ring and I recognized Rick’s number. I answered, but I was too shaken to say hello. “You OK, buddy?” he asked. I looked up and saw him running towards my car, holding his phone to his ear.

  “We’re OK,” I said. “Both of us. We’re OK.” I hugged Rochester, and he licked my face.

  My troubles weren’t over, though. The next day, I drove up to Doylestown for my meeting with Santiago Santos and his supervisor, an African-American woman named Jameelia Cain.

  Santos met me at the front counter and led me back to Ms. Cain’s office, a barren room without a single piece of personal memorabilia, just copies of various rules and regulations posted on the wall in simple metal frames.

  “You don’t seem to understand how serious your situation is,” she began, after we’d been introduced and Santos and I had sat down across from her on hard metal chairs.

  “I do,” I said. “I’ve been working hard, trying to set up my business. I don’t want to go back to prison.”

  “Did Mr. Santos go over the rules and regulations of your parole when he began working with you?”

  Santos sat there, not saying anything.

  “Yes.”

  “So you knew that as a convicted felon, you were not allowed to possess a firearm?”

  “It wasn’t mine,” I said. “It was my father’s. I didn’t even find it in the house until a couple of months after I came back to Pennsylvania.”

  She glared at me. “Do you know what you should have done at that point?”

  I noticed that my hands were shaking. “Yes. I should have reported it to Mr. Santos.”

  “And why didn’t you?”

  I shrugged. “I didn’t think about it.”

  “I could overlook the weapons violation,” she said. “You were not a violent offender, and it’s not like you went out and purchased the gun. But your violation of the agreement regarding your computer use is much more serious.”

  “I understand,” I said. “When Detective Stemper asked me to do that computer research for him, I should have used my own computer, so that Mr. Santos could have seen the results.”

  “In my opinion, Detective Stemper showed a lack of common sense in asking for your help in the first place,” she said. “It would be like sending an alcoholic to a bar, or a junkie out to buy nickel bags.”

  “The police do that all the time,” Santos said, and I was surprised that he spoke up. “Without the use of confidential informants they’d crack a lot fewer cases. And Mr. Levitan’s assistance did help solve four murders.”

  She trained an evil eye on him, but he didn’t back down. She turned to me instead. “The law gives a parole officer a lot of latitude in dealing with offenders. I’ll be honest with you, Mr. Levitan. It would be hard for me to send you back to prison in California for the violations you’ve committed. However, I have little confidence that you are ready to function in the civilian population without supervision.”

  I shifted on the hard chair.

  “It is my decision that you remain under the supervision of the parole board, and Mr. Santos, for an additional year. I wish I could make the penalty more severe, but Mr. Santos has argued on your behalf, as has Detective Stemper.”

  “Thank you,” I said. My whole body seemed to shake with a combination of relief and the loss of adrenaline. I could barely stand up, and I was afraid I’d fall over as Santos and I walked back to the outer office.

  “I’ll see you in a month,” he said. “Be prepared to go over your business plan.”

  “I will be. Thanks. I appreciate that you stood up for me.”

  “Jameelia’s a good woman,” he said. “We all want what’s best for you, Steve.”

  “You ever see those birds you were looking for the last time you were at my house?” I asked.

  “Oh, yeah. A couple of really rare ones, actually, migrating through. Another day and we’d have missed them.”

  We talked about birds and the park for a few minutes, and then I headed back to Stewart’s Crossing, where my dog waited for me.

  Caroline’s house was sold, and a young couple moved in. When I saw them a few days later, holding
hands, I remembered moving into our house in Silicon Valley with Mary. For the first time, the memory didn’t hurt.

  Gail introduced Edith to a stockbroker in town who helped her consolidate her accounts so she’d have less to keep track of, and I gave her a spreadsheet she could use each month to check off that she’d received the money she was expecting. She filled out endless forms for various banks and government agencies, and waited for everything to come together so she could get her money back.

  In Caroline’s memory, I reread Jane Eyre, recognizing that like Rochester, I had a secret. His was a crazy wife hiding in the attic, and mine was the fact that I’d been convicted of a felony. His wife had died in the fire, freeing him to pursue a romance with Jane. Had Jackie’s capture done the same for me?

  I was at The Chocolate Ear one Saturday morning, picking up a couple of croissants, when Gail and I got into conversation about a new movie that was opening, an adaptation of a Bronte novel. It was a chick flick, but my connection to the fictional Rochester, as well as the canine one, made me interested.

  “You want to see it together?” I asked. “Maybe tonight?”

  “That would be great,” she said. She looked at me. “You want to get some dinner beforehand?”

  “I’d like that,” I said.

  “Great. It’s a date.”

  That it was. My first since the divorce.

  We had burgers at The Drunken Hessian before the movie. It wasn’t the most romantic location in town, but I thought I’d better start slowly. After we gave the waitress our orders, I asked Gail, “So I understand from Ginny you were a hotshot pastry chef in New York. What brought you back to Stewart’s Crossing?”

  “My mother got sick,” she said. “And my boyfriend wasn’t very supportive, and I was getting worn down from the grind in the city. I quit my job and came back here to take care of her, and after she got better I decided to stay.”

  She sipped her beer. “How about you?”

  I took a deep breath. “I didn’t have much choice,” I said. “My ex-wife divorced me while I was in prison, and my father died and left me the townhouse. She sold our house and shipped all my stuff here. So I followed.”

 

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