Can't Keep a Brunette Down

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Can't Keep a Brunette Down Page 9

by Diane Bator


  "Gilda?" Thayer waved a hand in front of her face. "Did you have an idea or a stroke?"

  She pushed past him. "Neither. I'm tired. I'm going home."

  "I don't think so, honey." He reached for his handcuffs, but he was wearing civilian clothes. "If you know something, you need to tell me, or I'll lock you up."

  Her mouth dropped open. "For what?"

  "Mostly your protection, but also for impeding an investigation."

  "I showed you the post and the dents in the door, didn't I?"

  "I guess," Thayer said. "Go home, stay out of trouble, and don't leave town."

  She didn't make any promises. Two out of three wasn't so bad. Was it?

  CHAPTER ELEVEN

  Gilda jammed her hands beneath her armpits to keep them from shaking. Doc's request for her to meet him at the morgue that morning puzzled her, especially since Thayer and Fabio already sat on two plastic chairs outside his office.

  "Miss Wright." Fabio looked up from his magazine. "Nice to see you again. I take it Doc called you too."

  She fought the urge to hyperventilate. "Yeah. He wanted to see me about something."

  Thayer, head still bowed and frown in place, glanced up.

  "Us too." Fabio stretched his short legs and scratched at the growth of stubble on his chin. Since it was about the same length as Mick's, she guessed he hadn't shaved since Walter's murder either. "We've been sitting here for the last hour, waiting."

  "Really? That's odd. He just called me ten minutes ago." She tapped his office door.

  Thayer jolted upright. "Are you serious? He made us sit out here and wait for almost an hour, yet he just called you?"

  "Yes, I did." Doc appeared in the doorway. "Do you want to debate my motives, or do you want to know why you're all here?"

  Thayer barged into the room ahead of the others.

  Fabio hung back and shrugged before he followed his partner.

  "You and I need to have a chat." Doc grabbed Gilda's arm and lowered his voice. "Thayer gave me the coffee you thought was poisoned."

  "You didn't drink it, did you?" Her eyes widened.

  "No, but from the look on his face, I'm sure he'd want me to right now," Doc said. "You were right. There was a trace of cyanide. Not enough to kill you. Just enough to give you stomach cramps."

  "Which is why I went to see you Friday. I've had cramps for the past couple weeks." She glanced back into his office at Thayer, who sat with his arms folded across his chest, while Fabio toyed with Doc's Newton's cradle. "You don't think the two are related, do you? Maybe Xavier wanted me out of the way."

  "It's possible." Doc nudged his glasses up his nose.

  "But why would he do that?" she asked. "Do you think he killed Walter, or does he think I did?"

  "Sorry. I can't help you with Xavier's motives." Doc's reply was punctuated by a curse from Thayer before the metal balls on the Newton's cradle went silent. "I do think I can help you with Fabio and Thayer, however. Shall we?"

  She skirted around Thayer and Fabio to sit across the heavy pine desk from Doc. All the questions that went through her head when she took her run earlier were lost to nerves.

  "You all want to know about Walter's autopsy," Doc said. "I'm aware this is privileged information, and my duty is to both the police and the victim's family."

  Thayer shot Gilda a nasty glare. "Then maybe someone who is neither of those should leave the room."

  Doc cleared his throat. "Gilda has a vested interest in this case, and I'd like her to stay."

  "I do?" she asked. "I just hoped you'd say it was a crime of passion or a fight gone bad. I don't want to think someone actually set out to murder Walter. If you tell me it was an accident or self-defense, I'll back off."

  Doc sat back and toyed with his pen while he gazed out the window. "From everything I saw during the autopsy, the katana attack came after the fist fight."

  "A fist fight? Like a brawl, or are we talking karate moves like they do in the school?" Thayer asked. "Is that why he was so bruised?"

  Doc looked amused. "From the bruising, I can tell they were precise, well-placed strikes. A black belt could be that exact."

  Gilda shifted in her seat. "Would the blows have been enough to knock him out?"

  "If you're asking if he took any direct hits to the head, the answer is no," Doc said. "At least nothing that left a mark or could have incapacitated him."

  She closed her eyes. "Then someone must have poisoned him."

  "I checked him for known poisons and found nothing," Doc said. "But then I—"

  "Then maybe the killer was just stronger and faster," Fabio said. "There are a lot of different pressure points martial artists learn to aim for."

  "Which is exactly why Gilda is here." Doc turned to her.

  She hesitated. "I don't really know all the pressure points. I'm still learning all that. I do know the only people stronger and faster than Walter in our school are a couple of the other black belts."

  "Who?" Thayer asked.

  "Mick or Razi in particular. Both of them have extensive martial arts backgrounds. Xavier doesn't have the power, but he's big on poisons. Erik might be able to do some serious damage if he was mad enough." She scowled, unable to stop talking. "It has to be someone familiar with both the school and Walter's schedule."

  "Like you or anyone else at the Yoshida school," Thayer said.

  Fabio whistled. "That's a lot of suspects."

  "What if you exclude kids and people who couldn't physically carry out the crime?" Doc asked. "Or someone who didn't have access to—"

  Thayer jumped in. "Then we're back to our four main suspects."

  "Unless the killer had some help," Doc said.

  "Yeah, from someone who either lured Walter to the back room or let in the killer." Thayer's gaze met Gilda's. "What's wrong with you?"

  She folded her arms across her chest and turned to Doc. "You found something else."

  Fabio raised one eyebrow. "What makes you say that?"

  "She's known me for forever, and she's right. Walter was poisoned, but with something we don't normally test for." Doc hesitated. "Cobra venom."

  Gilda's heart raced. Cobra venom was far more exotic than she expected and not something she knew much about. She was willing to bet Xavier did. If he and Erik worked together, the two of them could easily…

  "Cobra venom? That seems like a long shot, doesn't it?" Thayer asked. "I didn't think you'd have the capabilities to test for something so exotic."

  "Normally, no, but I called in a favor." Doc flipped a pen across the backs of his fingers. "I never would've tested for it except I was acting on a tip."

  Fabio shifted in his seat. "A tip? You mean a phone call or something someone said?"

  "Someone pointed out Razi had recently been overseas to visit family, Mick was in the Dominican last week, and Walter's wife went to Asia not very long ago," Doc said. "I wasn't convinced at first, but when I did some online research, I learned a couple curious things."

  "Like what?" Thayer asked.

  "Cobra venom is a neurotoxin, which means it paralyzes the nerve centers that control breathing and heart rates. Walter would've become slow and drunk, which made him vulnerable to attack from anyone. Even someone Gilda's size could've beaten and killed him if she were so inclined." Doc shrugged. "I guess this means you gentlemen have some work to do."

  Direct and dismissive. Both men took the hint and left. When Thayer paused in the doorway and opened his mouth, Fabio grabbed his collar and dragged him away.

  Doc's lips tightened into a thin, white line. "Something tells me you'd better watch your back, my dear. Keep me in the loop, okay? Here's my cell number. Call if you need backup."

  "Backup?" She laughed. "You make me sound like some big-league detective."

  "We both know you're really more of a nosy Nelly, but I am concerned for your safety." He moved around the desk and stood in front of her. "If there is a murderer in your midst, and you keep sticking your nose wher
e it doesn't belong, there's a good chance someone will try to chop that nose off your face."

  "You think someone will try to kill me if I ask too many questions?" A chill ran through her core.

  "I brought you into this world, Gilda, and I don't want to watch them bury you," Doc said. "Promise me you'll be careful."

  She shuffled out of the hospital, heart pulsing somewhere near the pit of her stomach. Maybe it would be best to let Fabio and Thayer do their jobs so she could get on with her life. Why worry about finding a killer when Thayer and Fabio were far more qualified and had better resources to do the investigating?

  On her way home, she pushed open the door to Café Beanz. She planned to pick up a coffee and a muffin then go home and make sure her uniform was clean for training with Yoshida that evening. His classes were tough, but she'd learned to focus on everything except any pain incurred until she got home and collapsed into the bathtub.

  Yoshida. He lived in another town and visited so occasionally she'd never even thought of him as a suspect.

  Gilda took a deep breath. There she went again. She'd promised Doc she'd keep her nose out of things and let the police do the dirty work. No more investigating. If she didn't honor her promise, she'd end up under his scalpel before long. She paid for her breakfast and scurried toward the school to clean up before the workshop.

  Gary stepped out of Happy Harvey's Hangover Hut and waved. He was tenacious and should have been a cop alongside her father.

  CHAPTER TWELVE

  Early Tuesday afternoon, Gilda unlocked the front door of the school and was startled to find a lone figure standing in the lobby. Her heart seemed stuck in her throat. Yoshida, Mick's shihan—or senior instructor—since he was a kid, stood no taller than her, yet his presence seemed to fill the room with foreboding.

  "Shihan." She cringed. "Sensei Mick didn't tell me you were coming early."

  "I neglected to tell him." When Yoshida turned to face her, his eyes narrowed and hardened. "I hear you have spoken with a number of people about Walter Levy, Miss Wright."

  She shrank back without moving her feet. "I was trying to find out why someone would kill one of our most indispensable black belts."

  He toyed with blocks on her desk one of the younger students had left behind. "Do you think by asking questions you can solve a man's murder?"

  "No," she said, yet that was exactly what she was doing. No wonder Mick had called her Sherlock lately. "I guess so. I guess I feel like I owe it to his family to help find his killer."

  His eyebrows rose as he placed a business card on top of the bottom layer of three blocks, and his hard gaze met hers. "Did you kill him?"

  "No."

  Yoshida's face softened. He piled two more blocks on top of the card. "Then you owe them nothing. Keep your mind on your work and your nose in your business. Asking questions and meddling in the affairs of others will not save this school."

  She wanted to ask what he meant by saving the school but was concerned his comment was more a threat and less a stern piece of advice. "I will. Thank you."

  "I will return in time for our training session. I would suggest you not show up, or you may get hurt." He turned on his toes and, abandoning his block creation, walked out the door.

  Once the door closed, Gilda hid behind the desk in her cushy chair and dared to breathe. Despite the heat, she had a serious chill deep in her bones. A cup of tea would take the edge off, yet she was afraid to set foot outside the building. Too many suspects, too few answers.

  She glanced at the clock. No sign of Mick or any of the other black belts. No classes. No students. No Walter. Tears threatened to fall on her paperwork and smear the ink. Yoshida was right. She didn't kill Walter, and she didn't owe his family anything, including peace of mind. The questions—snooping really—were all for her sanity. Her peace of mind…that her friends and coworkers weren't murderers.

  Why had he told her not to come to train that night? Either he knew something was going to happen or—

  "Who's in here?" Mick called from the front door. It wasn't like him to be so paranoid. Was he worried about running into the murderer, or just Yoshida?

  "Just me." She guessed neither Yoshida nor Gary had stuck around outside to wait.

  He peered around the corner. "Are you armed?"

  "I have a stapler," she said. "Does that count?"

  "I can deal with that." Mick leaned on the counter. "Whoa. Are you okay, Sherlock? You look as green as the mats."

  "Yeah. Still a bit rattled, I guess."

  "What are you doing here then?"

  "Midmonth payments. Tidying up before the workshop. I don't want things to fall behind while we're closed." Gilda paused. "Yoshida was here when I arrived."

  Mick stopped short, and the muscles in his shoulders tensed. "What did he want?"

  "I don't know, but he seemed surprised to see me. The door was locked, and I had to use my key to get in."

  "Interesting." Mick disappeared around the corner. "What did he say?"

  She bit her lower lip and waited.

  When she didn't reply right away, he reappeared. "Gilda? Are you sure you're okay?"

  "Fine." She hated lying to him and shuffled her paperwork to appear busy.

  "Uh-huh. Did he walk around and check out the dojo or anything?"

  "He stood exactly where you are now, peeked through the doorway, then left," she said. "He did warn me not to train tonight."

  "What were his exact words?"

  "He suggested I not show up, or I may get hurt." She hugged her stomach. "He also told me to stop asking questions and meddling in the affairs of others since it won't save this school. What did he mean by that?"

  Mick closed his eyes and ran a hand through his thick hair. "Go home, Gilda."

  "But I—"

  "Go home and don't come back until after Walter's funeral."

  "I have to—"

  He sighed. "Good-bye."

  "Mick, it'll only take a—"

  His jaw hardened. "Don't bother coming to the workshop later. Take the night off to go hang out with Marion. Go to a movie or for dinner. Anything."

  She didn't even open her mouth this time. She just stared at him. After a moment, her shoulders drooped. "At least let me tidy up and file my paperwork."

  He turned and went back to his office. "I'll see you tomorrow."

  Gilda straightened up her desk before she walked outside into the heat and headed for home. The questions popped up at a rate that matched her pace and followed her all the way out to her garden. What was Mick up to, and why did Yoshida tell her not to show up to train that night? Frustrated, she puttered around in the sunshine for half an hour before the phone rang.

  "Okay, Gilda. What's going on?" Marion asked.

  "What are you talking about?" She sat on the back step.

  "Oh, I don't know. First I overheard Thayer tell someone he ran into you at the morgue, and then Sensei Mick calls me—keep in mind, he's never, ever called me before—and suggested I keep you busy tonight for some reason. He even offered me bribe money. What in heaven's name have you done now?"

  Gilda sighed. Mick really was trying to keep her away from the school. "I haven't done anything. I promise."

  "Well, your boss seems to think I need to keep you busy tonight and suggested you and I go to dinner and a movie." The sounds in the background said she was still in the dispatch office. "What do you say? My treat. I'll stop at home and change, and then we can have dinner and a couple glasses of wine and—"

  She was still stuck on one detail. "Mick put you up to this?"

  "Yeah. Well, not totally. You are my best friend, you know," Marion said. "What's wrong? Did I miss something?"

  "No, but I think I have. Tonight is the session with Shihan Yoshida, and both Yoshida and Mick have told me not to show up."

  "Holy crap. Is your karate that bad?"

  Gilda groaned. "I think there's something going on at the school that I've totally missed. I'm hoping if I go
to class tonight, I'll find out more."

  "See, that's where you and I differ. If Mick told me to stay away, I'd stay away and lock myself inside my house, no maybe about it. Hang on a sec, will you?" Her next words were muffled but clear. "Get lost. My conversations are none of your business. No, I'm not talking to Gilda. I'm talking to my boyfriend."

  "Yeah? What's his name?" Thayer asked in the background.

  "Tiny. Do you really want to mess with a guy named Tiny? No? I didn't think so."

  Gilda smiled. "I have to get ready for class. I'll talk to you later."

  "Don't you dare hang up on me, Tiny." She lowered her voice. "Honey, do you have brain damage? Listen to Mick. Forget about training, and meet me for dinner. Whatever's going on, you'll just end up smack in the middle. Do you want to end up like Walter?"

  Gilda got up to pace the flagstone garden path. "No, but what if Walter found out something someone didn't want him to know? What if another black belt is being set up to die?"

  Marion groaned. "Then you'll end up in the middle and get killed, no matter what I say."

  "No, I won't. There will be other students there."

  "And what if they're all involved?"

  Gilda hadn't thought that far ahead.

  CHAPTER THIRTEEN

  Despite the warnings, her gut feelings, and Marion's misgivings, Gilda returned to the school Tuesday evening. She came around the corner and ran straight into Yoshida. When he stepped away from her, something flickered across his face. Fear? Anger? The look disappeared as fast as it appeared.

  "Miss Wright." The lines in his face seemed etched deeper than in the afternoon. His head appeared freshly shaven. Ready for battle.

  "Shihan." She bowed before the senior instructor and cringed as she set her pink sports bag on the floor. "I'm not sure how many students will come. Most have cancelled."

 

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