Dead Without Honor
Page 3
“Where is everyone?” Mick strode through the front door.
She wiped away her tears. “They just left. Didn’t you see the parade? Walter caught a lift with the guys from the morgue. Where were you? I’ve been texting you all afternoon.”
She sounded crass but no longer cared. How dare he leave her alone to deal with the police and a hundred parent’s calls? Wasn’t this his school? His business? After all, he was part owner and ran the day to day operations.
He flinched. “Your buddy Thayer grabbed me in the coffee shop and locked me in a room the size of a shoe box. My cell phone was detained by some lab guy, who now knows the phone numbers of you and every other woman in town. Anyway, I meant our students. Is anyone coming to class tonight?”
Her jaw dropped open. “Excuse me? Walter was murdered and you’re worried about class attendance? We need to clean up and replace mats before we can even have a class. The cleanup crew is coming soon and they need someone to lock up later.”
“They took our mats?” He stared. “Why would they do that?”
“It’s called evidence,” she said. “All the blood is a biohazard, and the mats have to be specially taken care of. A lot of other things went to the lab. At least this way I don’t have to clean up all the mess.”
Mick let out a long breath. His fingers drummed his left thigh, more nervous than he tried to let on. If he started to pace, she’d know to keep her distance. “You’re right. Did you post a sign to say we’re closed?”
“On the front door. You walked right past it. I also changed the message on the answering machine and posted a message on our website and Facebook page.”
No concern. No compassion. Just commands. Demands. Ugh, why did she ever idolize him? In a bad situation, he folded and ran for the nearest coffee shop. Just like Thayer. She brushed that thought aside.
“Did you call the students who normally come tonight?” he asked.
Was he serious? “Only three. The rest called here to find out when the funeral is and make sure everyone else was okay.”
“No doubt Marion already told everyone what happened.”
Gilda shrugged. “So what if she did? That saved me some work.”
He wandered into the dojo and knelt. There were only half the pale green tatami mats inside than there were that morning. “If we call right away, our supplier might be able to ship us new ones by Tuesday.”
“I already called,” she said. “First of all, they don’t have any in stock. Secondly, they want cash up front. It seems our credit is in question. Oh, and as of five, they closed for the long weekend.”
“Since when do we have bad credit?” He stood and ran a hand through his thick, black hair. “We’ve always paid them up front.”
“I don’t know. Why don’t you talk to them next week and straighten things out? They won’t talk to me anymore. They want to talk to you.”
“I think you’re overreacting.” He rolled his eyes. “Things can’t be that bad. I’m sure you can straighten it out just as well as I can.”
“Trust me, I tried.” When he headed for the change area, Gilda stopped him. “Oh, I wouldn’t go back there if I were you. It’s not exactly clean.”
Mick went anyway. “What the bloody hell happened back here?”
“Good choice of words. Offhand, I’d say a fight,” she said and peered around him. “A pretty nasty one.”
He snorted. “Good guess, Sherlock. Now tell me who Walter fought with.”
Gilda wished she could. She didn’t want to let on she suspected him. Actually, him, Erik, Razi and Xavier—all the remaining black belts. Under the circumstances, she was wise to keep her mouth shut until the police could prove who killed Walter, since all four of them were capable of killing her with the flick of a pinkie finger.
“Where are the curtains that were on the stalls?” Mick asked.
Only two curtains remained on the floor. The rest were in police custody. To think the curtains were under arrest rather than being checked for evidence made her smile for a second before her eyes welled up again.
Gilda could barely hold back her giggle. “Thayer took them in for interrogation.”
“Funny. We’ll have to replace them before we can reopen.” He knelt to examine a spot of blood already smeared by the forensics crew’s swabs. “We also need to mop the floors and what’s left of the mats.”
“Like I said, Fabio called the biohazard team to come in and do a proper cleaning. We shouldn’t even be back here. I only stayed until I could get hold of you.”
Mick kicked a bench, which dented the wall and sent more debris onto the tiles.
Gilda thought something fell from beneath the bench onto the floor.
“Why did this have to happen now? Yoshida arrives on Tuesday for a training session. There’s no way I can replace all the mats and clean this place up before then. Not with the long weekend. Gilda, I need you to pull some overtime. We’ll have to pull up all the mats and get some cheap ones at the hardware store.”
She widened her eyes. “How am I supposed to get a load of mats here? You know I don’t have a car. Besides, it’s the long weekend and the school’s closed Saturday and I have to catch a bus to Erie after classes tonight.”
“Yeah? Well, I was due in Detroit an hour ago.” He opened a utility closet and pulled out the mop and bucket. “We don’t have time to wait for some cleaning crew. I’ll get the cleaner. You get to work. At least we can get rid of the rest of the blood before it starts to smell.”
Gilda gaped. “We’re not supposed to touch anything.”
“Well we can’t just leave it like this.” While he left to get cleaner, she glanced at the bare patches on the dojo floor to assess how many new mats they needed. She glanced back to the bench Mick kicked. Had she actually seen something fall?
She moved the bench aside and there lay a man’s ring embossed with a clenched fist on the front. The goju-ryu karate symbol. Curious, she knelt on the floor to check the underside of the bench. A broken piece of masking tape still clung to the wood. The ring triggered a partial memory. She’d seen it before. Why would anyone hide it in the school of all places?
She pulled out her cell phone and took a picture of both the ring and the tape. At a loss for what to do next, she picked it up with a piece of toilet paper and stuck it in her pocket. She’d keep the ring somewhere safe until she could take it to Fabio. Odd how, after all their careful searching, both the police and forensics crew missed it.
Something else seemed out of place in the change room. The scale was fine. The bench was moved, slightly, away from the now-dented wall. Something seemed amiss that only her subconscious picked up and she couldn’t put her finger on.
“I got the cleaner.” Mick set a bottle near the bucket and mop. “Let me know how long it takes so I can adjust your paycheck.”
“Oh no you don’t.” Gilda wheeled around. “I’m not staying. Either do it yourself or stay and wait for the cleaning crew. I’m leaving.”
“Whoa.” He took a step back and held up both hands. “You okay?”
Her eyes welled with tears. “No, I’m not okay. I found Walter’s body, faced the police alone and now you expect me to stay and clean up the mess. Not this time. I’m out of here. You stay. I’m done.” She shoved past him on her way to the lobby and let the tears flow.
Mick caught her before she reached her handbag. “Wait. Gilda, I’m sorry.”
She stopped, sure she’d heard wrong.
“You’re right.” He pulled her into his arms and held her close. His hug seemed awkward at first, but his warmth comforted her. “I ran out when I should’ve been here to make sure things were okay. Instead, I left to meet the instructors to ensure they wouldn’t quit or we’d have to close by Tuesday.”
“Quit?” Breathless, she tilted her head and bumped his chin. If the instructors all quit, she’d be out of a job. “Why would everyone quit?”
He sighed. “You’ve been here long enough to know there
are issues. Razi and Walter have never seen eye to eye. Since Razi’s not a citizen yet, he’s afraid the police will go after him. Xavier had that argument with Walter last week out on the sidewalk in front of the school and Erik...” He hesitated. “Erik wanted to take over some of Walter’s classes.”
“Great. So I’m working with a band of possible murderers.” She flared her nostrils more out of fear than anger and she tried to pull away. “What did you have against Walter?”
He averted his gaze into the dojo, but kept his arms around her. “Nothing.”
Something. What had he told Thayer in the interview room? She shoved him away. “Seriously? Walter’s dead and, for all I know, you killed him.”
Mick grimaced and walked around her desk. “Walter wanted me to help him start his own karate school, but I didn’t think he was ready. He needed money upfront as well as more interaction with the students, which is why I let him take over so many classes.”
“That was months ago. I only remember because he threw my flower vase at your office door and there was glass all over the lobby twenty minutes before classes started.” She’d picked up every shard of glass so no one got cut and cut her fingers in three places.
“Yeah, then Walter held a so-called secret meeting with the others to try and get them on his side.” Mick dropped onto her comfy chair. “They came to me later to fill me in. I was mad, but not mad enough to kill him. Not literally, anyway.”
“Not then anyway.” She folded her arms across her waist as a shiver raced through her. In his defense, Mick had bandaged her bleeding fingers that time. He’d even held a wet cloth to her hand to stop the bleeding and pushed a stray hair out of her mouth. Something so insignificant, yet so intimate at the same time. Until his girlfriend, Chloe Del Garda, walked in. “Yoshida was furious that Walter dared to even question your decision.”
“At the time. A month later, he wanted to hand Walter a school on a silver platter.”
“What changed?” she asked.
He smirked. “You’re not thinking of taking the case are you, Sherlock? You’re smart and you already know the most about this place. You should be able to tell me whodunit then we can reopen for Tuesday classes with no problem.”
Gilda cringed. He hadn’t answered her question. “Everyone’s leaving town for the weekend.”
“Not anymore,” he said. “Your buddy Thayer told us to all stick around for a few days while he questions us. Didn’t he tell you the same thing?”
More proof the whole town knew Gilda Wright had no life. Her face overheated until she was sure she was redder than the sparring gloves he gave her for Christmas. “Thayer doesn’t think I’m capable of anything that requires brain power or physical prowess.”
Mick chuckled. “Doesn’t sound like he knows you very well. You could kick his butt with both hands tied behind your back. Is he still after you to get back together with him? Man, some detective. You would think after two years he’d take the hint.”
“I got tired of him not knowing me very well,” she said. “Most of the time, he treated me more like a criminal than an equal.”
He toyed with Gilda’s favorite slim silver pen, a gift from her father shortly before he died in the line of fire a twenty-seven-year member of the Newville police force. The town had even named Wright Park in his honor. She didn’t want him touching her pen and itched to snatch it from him but refrained. Later, she’d take it home.
Someone banged on the front door at the same time the phone rang. Both she and Mick jumped, not sure which way to turn.
When Mick reached for the phone, Gilda turned away. “I’ll get the door.”
“Yoshida Martial Arts.” Mick answered the phone then lowered his voice. “What do you want? I told you you’re not welcome here. I don’t care if you do have questions. Don’t call here. No. I’ll talk to you later.” He hit end and slammed the phone onto the desk.
Gilda paused with her hand on the door lock. Her heart drummed so fast she grew dizzy. Mick had never kicked anyone out of the school that she knew of. Who and why now? She’d have to check the caller ID on the phone later. Maybe getting rid of him was a good idea. Then she could snoop.
“You okay, lady?” A man in white asked from the other side of the door and flashed an identification card.
“I’m good.” Her breaths came short and shallow. Walter’s sudden death—murder—had made her afraid of every little bump in the building.
When Mick disappeared into his office, she showed the man in white the dojo and the change room. “This is the worst of it. The police took the rest. Mick will let you out later.”
He patted her arm. “Thanks. My boys and I will take care of everything. You go get some rest and don’t worry about a thing.”
“Thank you.” She leaned against a clean section of the wall and closed her eyes.
When she opened them, she finally realized what was different about the change room. A rust-colored scroll listing the kanji of the Four Possessions of the Samurai usually hung at the far end of the room. HILT. Honor, Integrity, Loyalty, and Time.
The scroll was gone. Not fallen. Not moved. Gone.
Gilda debated telling Mick but chose to keep her revelation private for now and gathered her things to go home. She suddenly not only hated the smells of cleaner and copper but also the color red. She let out a sigh that betrayed the tears beneath it.
“Hey, Gilda, can you stay for a bit longer? I need to run out and...” Mick came out of his office and stopped when he saw her. “Oh, hell. Come here.”
He draped his arms around her and gave her another hug. He smelled of something other than floor cleaner and blood. Something familiar and comforting she hadn’t noticed earlier. Stale coffee from Café Beanz. “Go home, Sherlock. I’ll let these guys out then come back to check on things tomorrow. You go home and rest. It’s been a long day. Don’t worry.”
“But I—”
“No, you were right. You’ve done more than enough. Thanks for all your help. I’ll take care of things tonight.” He ushered her out of the karate school, leaving her no opportunity to check caller ID, and locked the door behind her.
She stood alone on the sidewalk and fingered the tissue wrapped ring in her pocket with far more questions than answers. Her eyes burned with tears and fatigue. She’d bring the new evidence to Fabio in the morning when she could think more clearly.
After Gilda left the school, she stumbled across the street to Happy Harvey’s Hangover Hut. A glorified, tiki-infested liquor and convenience store, Happy’s wasn’t the place to go if you had a hangover, more like if you were in desperate search of one. Happy—no one ever called him Harvey that she’d known—was a seventy-year-old man who became disillusioned with retirement. He’d been friends with her parents forever and was still Gilda’s good friend.
Right now she needed a friend more than she needed a bottle, blowing out a long breath, she pulled on the door. Locked. She peered through the glass before she noticed the “Closed for staff meeting” sign on the door.
Disappointed Happy wasn’t around, she wandered the few blocks home, her thoughts as disheveled as her hair. Once she arrived home, she locked the door as shock set back in and she lost control of her emotions.
Not that she was Walter’s biggest fan, but her imagination led her into some frightening scenarios. She spent most of the night staring at the ceiling and pacing, her thoughts following her around the living room to haunt her. Had one of her coworkers, or even her boss, murdered another person? What or who was Mick Williams hiding?
Chapter 4
Saturday morning brought calm and grief, but also tweaked her baser nosy side. She sat and stared at the ring from the change room for nearly half an hour before making a list of things she needed to do today. Within the hour, she’d not only forgotten them all, but abandoned the list on the table to pace the room.
When the doorbell rang at eight, her heart stuttered and her breath stuck in her aching throat. She caught a gli
mpse of her reflection in the mirror behind the door. Frightening. Her eyes were puffy from crying all night, her skin was pale and blotchy and her hair clung to her face from sweat and tears. She opened the door.
“You okay, Gilda?” Xavier Wyndham, second degree black belt and one of their senior instructors, stood on her front step with a cup of coffee in each hand. A former professional bodybuilder and fitness instructor, he would turn fifty next month. Gravity and a lack of serious training had softened him, but not much. “I hear you found Walter’s body yesterday. That must have been rough. I wanted to check on you sooner, but Thayer corralled us all into itty bitty rooms at the station for half the night.”
Even her voice, gravelly and low, was in rough shape. “Better than I look and sound.”
“Glad to hear it. I brought you coffee. Extra sugar and cream to combat shock and fatigue.” The sun shone off Xavier’s balding head when he handed her the cup with a white mark on the black lid.
“You didn’t have to do that. Thanks.” She was dressed for her morning run but definitely not ready. Along with the penchant for drinking coffee, she’d picked up a few good habits working at the school. Her karate skills had sharpened considerably after she started running and had lost a few ice cream pounds. Caffeine and sugar might help hold the scary thoughts at bay. At the very least they would improve her run time.
“I wanted to bring donuts, but I’m cutting weight for that big tournament next month.” Xavier patted his paunch and looked sheepish. “I want to compete in an easier weight category. The guys I usually fight are monsters.”
“Me too.” Gilda managed a tired smile. “Trying to lose a couple pounds, I mean. For me though, not for a tournament. Running helps.”
“I hate running unless it’s after an ice cream truck.” He sat on the top step. “Hard to believe someone would kill Walter. He was such a nice guy. Pretty violent way to go. Whoever killed him would either have to be pretty strong or find an easy way to incapacitate him, like poison or a knock to the head. Personally, I think I’d prefer something more subtle like poison or a heart attack. What about you?”