Dead Without Honor

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by Diane Bator




  Dead Without Honor

  A Gilda Wright Mystery

  By Diane Bator

  Digital ISBNs

  EPUB 978-0-2286-0128-9

  Kindle 978-0-2286-0129-6

  Print ISBN 978-0-2286-0130-2

  Amazon Print ISBN 978-0-2286-0131-9

  Copyright 2018 by Diane Bator

  Cover art by Michelle Lee

  All rights reserved. Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise) without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the publisher of this book

  Dedication

  To all the people who have supported me, inspired me and kept me sane.

  Special hugs to Tammy. I miss our weekly trips for Pumpkin Soup!

  Chapter 1

  Gilda’s cell phone vibrated next to her plate, making the ice in her half-full water glass dance. She groaned, her stomach churning, as it had all week. “Not again.”

  Across the table, Marion Yearly, her best friend and crying towel, scowled and flicked a toast crumb off the blue table cloth. “Just turn the stupid thing off already. If your boss needs you that badly, he’ll find you. Otherwise, he’ll wait. He knows we’re at The Cove Restaurant. We’re here every Friday morning. Actually, you should invite him to join us sometime.”

  “Right.” Gilda laughed. Of course she’d answer Mick’s text. She always did and usually regretted speaking to her boss on her own time. “Like he’d want to hang out with his receptionist all day when he sees me half the night.” Her face burned. “That didn’t come out right. I meant during class times.”

  Their weekly brunch certainly hadn’t been a peaceful one. Gilda’s phone had buzzed at least ten times since they were seated. Three times alone since her Belgian waffle and crispy bacon arrived two minutes earlier.

  Marion grimaced when the phone buzzed again. “Okay, I’ll bite. What does his majesty want this time?”

  She sighed. “He can’t find the file for our lease or the latest inventory list.”

  “Tell him to wait until you get there.” Marion sopped up runny egg yolk with a triangle of buttered toast. “It’s only another hour or so anyway.”

  Gilda tossed a wistful glance at her food, her appetite waning, then reached for her phone. If she didn’t text him back right away, he’d send ten more messages by the time she took her next mouthful. “I would, but he’s going away for the long weekend and won’t be there by the time I show up. If I answer him now, he might leave me alone for a while.”

  “Even better, you’ll have all weekend to find them and he’ll have to be patient for a change. You have a life. You can’t keep dropping everything just because he wants something.” Marion, dark-haired and raven-eyed, was taller than Gilda by a full foot and twice as wide, built more like an NFL quarterback than a 9-1-1 operator. Of course, Gilda doubted there was a stereotype for 9-1-1 operators anyway.

  “I already know where they are. Sorry. Give me a second.” In the file drawer. She typed. Lease under Yoshida Lease. Inventory under Inventory.

  Once she set the phone aside, she had just enough time to cut off a bite of waffle and bring it halfway to her mouth before her phone buzzed again. Her stomach sank. Cripes, at this rate, she’d never get to eat before her doctor’s appointment. At least her stomach didn’t hurt as much as it had lately. More than likely from stress caused by Sensei Mick Williams.

  Marion grabbed the phone first and sat on it. “That’s it. The only time you and I have been able to get together is Friday mornings because Mick always needs something. Honey, if I didn’t know better, I’d think you two were married.”

  Gilda flushed, bowed her head and picked at her waffle, not wanting to make a scene. Far from being married, they were only boss and secretary, which lately he seemed to take as the same thing as husband and wife. Somewhere over the past two years, the line had become a bit blurry and most of the black belts teased her about being his third arm.

  When she started working at Yoshida Martial Arts two years earlier, she would mostly see Sensei Mick in passing. She once overheard him tell one of the instructors she was bright and competent and she could figure things out on her own. So she had. Lately, however, she couldn’t seem to breathe without him hovering over her and instructing her on how to take each breath.

  Yoshida Martial Arts ran as smooth as a straight ribbon of highway and boasted a profit every month. Both of which had made the school’s namesake, Shihan Yoshida, sit up and take notice. Maybe Mick was nervous because Yoshida had become prone to showing up at odd times and nosing around to undermine Mick’s position as manager and sensei, teacher. Male posturing was one thing she’d never understand, no matter how long she worked at the school.

  “Hello?” Marion leaned forward and waved a piece of toast in front of Gilda’s face. “For the record, you got two more texts while you were daydreaming. My butt’s shimmying so much I feel like a belly dancer.”

  Gilda snorted then laughed. “I can put my phone in my purse if it’s annoying you.”

  “No, I want you to relax and eat your breakfast.” A small grin lit Marion’s face. “Besides, I might keep it. I’m kind of enjoying this.”

  “I think you need a real boyfriend.” Gilda wasn’t so sure she wanted the phone back anyway. “Actually, I think we both do.”

  With Marion sitting between Gilda and her phone, they enjoyed the rest of brunch. Occasionally, Marion flinched. “Ooh, another text from your sensei.”

  “He’s going to think I’m avoiding him.” Gilda swiped one last gob of whipped cream with her finger and brought it toward her mouth.

  “You are, so stop being a pushover. At least until we’re done eating,” Marion said, waving her knife. “Look, you’ve stuck up for yourself before so stop sticking your head in the sand and lay down some boundaries with that man. Your time is your time. You don’t see me answering nine-one-one calls over breakfast, do you?”

  “Good morning, ladies.” A tall, blond man stopped next to their table.

  Gilda froze, her finger still covered in whipped cream. Detective Jason Thayer was the former boyfriend she’d stood up to when she dumped him in such a dramatic fashion the story made the newspapers for an entire week two years earlier. Apparently, Thayer had thrived on his sudden celebrity and got a lot of dates because of the exposure. Gilda had cowered in her house for weeks before Marion was able to drag her out and helped her get a job in the karate school so she could get a backbone.

  Marion batted her eyes. “Good morning, Detective Thayer. Are you here to arrest the kitchen staff for beating the eggs or just to harass Gilda some more?”

  Thayer twisted his face into a grimace then turned his attention to Gilda, who sat motionless while the whipped cream blob began to slide down her finger. “It looks like you were expecting me. I’d happily lick that off for you, but I have an image to uphold.”

  “Yeah. We wouldn’t want to improve on that now, would we?” Gilda pushed away her plate and fought the urge to flick the goo at his suit jacket. She wiped her finger on her napkin. No point in giving him more ideas. “What do you want?”

  He shrugged. “Nothing. I just stopped by to say hello.”

  Marion rolled her eyes. “Oh, brother. You want to stick with that or tell her the truth?”

  “Which truth is that?” Gilda asked. “The one where he says he loves me and would die for me or the one where he cheats on me with any woman who’ll have him?”

  Thayer’s face turned pink. “I’m just trying to be sociable.”

  “I overheard him tell a couple offi
cers he’s this close to taking you back.” Marion held her index finger and thumb a quarter inch apart.

  What kind of man refused to take no for an answer even after two years? Gilda shut her eyes and inhaled slowly. I am not going to make a scene.

  Thayer frowned. “What I said was—”

  His partner, Detective John Fabio, clapped a hand on his left shoulder. “Just ask her out already so she can deck you and get it over with. We have work to do today.”

  Thayer growled, the color in his face deepening to crabapple red. “If you guys don’t mind, I’d like to do this alone.”

  “I don’t mind at all. I was just leaving.” Gilda stood and grabbed her purse. She marched up to the cashier to pay for their food. This week it was her turn. A convenient excuse to escape.

  Marion joined her, shoving the cell phone into Gilda’s back pocket. “You might want this before I get too attached.”

  “Who does Thayer think he is?” Gilda reached for a mint then took three. She needed something to crunch.

  “One of Sandstone Cove’s finest.” Marion sighed. “He certainly does look the part, even if he does need a complete attitude adjustment.”

  When Gilda’s phone buzzed, she gritted her teeth and growled. “Not again.”

  “Ah and there’s another one who looks the part,” Marion said.

  “Mick?” She left her change as a generous tip and pushed the front door open. “What do you mean he looks the part?”

  Marion popped a mint into her mouth. “Handsome and authoritative, but from the stories I’ve heard—”

  Gilda covered her ears. “I don’t want to hear any more stories. It’s bad enough I have parents at the school spreading rumors. I don’t really want to hear them from my best friend. Keep in mind I do have to work with those guys.”

  “Even if I know the stories are all true?” Marion asked.

  “Especially if.”

  “Oh, Gilda, Gilda, Gilda. You live in such a secluded little world.” Marion draped an arm across her shoulders as they walked toward the doctor’s office. “Someday you’ll be grateful for all of us looking out for you. I have to get to work. You be careful, okay? I’ll try to find you a guy who isn’t such a jerk.”

  She was ten minutes early for her appointment, which left her enough time to catch up on all of Mick’s “urgent” texts while her stomach gurgled as it had for over a week. Her gaze darted to the clock on the wall for the fifth time in the past minute and sighed. Eleven thirty. Normally she never had to wait so long for Doctor Ryan Graham, who’d delivered Gilda as a baby, to appear in the doorway.

  She tapped her foot against the leg of the chair. The karate school she worked for held classes every day at noon. If Doc Graham didn’t show up soon, she’d miss class for sure. Not that Mick would be concerned. He could handle anything that came up while she was away. Still...

  After sitting on a board hard chair for half an hour, Gilda sent Mick a quick text to say she wouldn’t be in the lunch hour class. When he didn’t text her back within seconds, she remembered Walter Levy, the school’s most senior black belt, was supposed to teach class today. Mick planned to be halfway to Detroit to attend a family function.

  She punched in the school’s phone number from memory, not surprised when the answering machine picked up. If she said she’d be there by one, she’d have time to grab a peppermint tea at Café Beanz on her way to work then clean up before classes started at four.

  Chapter 2

  Gilda set her cup of tea on the ground by the brick wall and stuck her key in the front door lock. One more afternoon of work before the karate school closed for the long weekend. After training at seven, she’d be free to go home, change into her bathing suit and head to the beach for a dip before dinner. Doc Graham’s orders were for her to relax and eat more fiber.

  The door was already unlocked.

  Her stomach clenched as she walked through the small room which served as a hazardous containment room for wet boots all winter to the second set of doors that led to the lobby. Either Walter was still inside or he’d gone off in a rush. The back of her neck tingled. “Hello? Anyone here?”

  No answer. No lights on. No movement.

  “Hello? Walter? Mick?” She peered around the corner toward the dojo.

  Still nothing.

  Gilda flicked on the lights. The lobby was empty, but something—someone—was on the mats in the dojo, the training hall. She reached over and turned on the second set of lights to illuminate the dojo and change area.

  Someone forgot to tell Walter Levy samurai don’t commit seppuku with a sword. They normally carried a much smaller knife to kill themselves with. He lay still on the mats while a long, gently curved blade stood straight out of his chest. He was dead and there was no earthly way it was by his own hand since the katana blade was longer than his arms. At best, he could have stabbed his lower belly, not his chest.

  And the murderer could still be inside the school.

  “Oh, wow.” Eyes hot with tears, Gilda struggled to catch her breath. Heart racing, she dove between the two chairs behind the reception desk, knocking her head against the one Walter had brought only two weeks earlier, and clutched her cell phone to call 9-1-1.

  “Nine-one-one. What’s your emergency?” a woman asked.

  She spoke in a loud whisper praying the killer was already long gone. “Somebody stabbed Walter. I think he’s dead.”

  The woman sucked in a sharp breath, but remained professional, as though she’d received this type of call a thousand times before. “What is your name and location, ma’am?”

  “Marion,” she said. “It’s me, Gilda. I’m at the karate school.”

  “Gilda? Sorry, but you sound weird.” Tapping sounded through the phone. “What did you say is wrong?”

  She peered over the counter and peeked through the open dojo door to make sure she hadn’t imagined things. Nope. Walter still lay on the mats with the sword firmly in place, the black foam blocker next to him making his salt and pepper hair seem even whiter than usual. She shuddered. “One of the black belts, Walter Levy. It looks like somebody killed him.”

  “Oh no,” she said. “Are you sure he’s dead?”

  “He has a sword through his chest. How long before the police arrive?”

  “The police?” Marion sounded bewildered for a moment then became all business again. “Stay on the line. I’ll get them out there right away. You didn’t touch anything, did you?”

  “No, but—”

  “Did you notice any signs of a break in?”

  The door had been unlocked. “No, but—”

  “Is there anyone else in the building with you?”

  Her heart stuttered. “I don’t think so. Nobody answered when I yelled and none of the other instructors come in for at least another hour. I have to call Mick before he leaves town.” She winced. That sounded wrong, but at least Marion already knew what she meant.

  “Just stay put. The police are on the way.”

  No doubt the story of Walter’s demise would ignite the small town long before the police or her boss arrived. Her suspicions were confirmed when Marion hung up without another word, rather than keeping her on the line until help arrived.

  Gilda sighed, pressed the “end” button on the phone and steeled herself for another look at the corpse. Body. Body somehow seemed less final. Less dead. Bodies could still be alive.

  Mick. Crap. She needed to call him right away.

  Gaze still on Walter, Gilda dialed a familiar number and coiled a strand of her light brown hair around her right index finger. “Mick? We have a problem. I need you to come back here.” She took a deep breath and fought to keep her voice even. “Now.”

  Noise outside the school made it hard to hear his words. “Can’t. On the road—”

  Her breath caught in the back of her throat and came out a strangled gasp. “I don’t care where you’re going. Not everything’s always about you. Get back to the school now and bring help
with you.” Her voice echoed through the empty karate school. “Walter Levy is dead.”

  More noise as the front door opened then the second door before footsteps neared her desk. “Gilda? You in here? Don’t move until we do a sweep.”

  She muttered then disconnected and wiped away a tear. Since her father had been an officer for nearly thirty years, she knew the police would ask if she’d noticed signs of a break-in or saw an intruder.

  Once Thayer gave the “all clear” and a couple of forensics people came in, she stood in the middle of the ten by ten foot lobby. Nothing except dirt probably tracked in from last night’s students and a trace of mud from the rain shower that morning anybody could have tracked in before the adult day class. Possible evidence. Her breath stuck in her throat.

  Thayer, every bit as handsome as he had been in ten years ago in high school when they first met as seniors, waved her back inside and told her to sit and wait. “The M.E. and forensics are on their way. You’re not leaving until we have a chat.”

  Reluctantly, she flared her nostrils and turned around. She preferred to be interrogated by Attila the Hun over the ex-boyfriend who repeatedly cheated on her.

  “Sorry for your loss.” Detective Fabio, his partner, patted her shoulder and handed her a wrapped mint. “How you doing, kid?”

  “A bit shaken.”

  “That’s normal. Eat the candy. You’ll probably start to go into shock soon.” Fabio shot Mick a glare.

  Fabio resembled a stone gargoyle much more than the hunk on the cover of a book. He was bald and had cauliflower ears, bulging eyes and a tree stump neck. When he walked away toward the crime scene, his limp was more pronounced than usual as he took charge of the crime scenes inside the dojo and the change rooms.

  In the doorway of the dojo, Gilda spied a spot of blood. Actually, two spots. One little girl had a nosebleed in class last night. Did she stand in that doorway or had she gone through the student entrance in back? This door was for the instructors and, in an official capacity only, her. When she came to train, she used the student entrance near the change rooms. When she needed to interrupt classes, she used the instructor entrance.

 

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