Cat Nap
Page 24
“Even if he’s adopted another family, I just want to know that he’s safe,” Sunny implored. She turned to Will. “Constable Price here has been kind enough to volunteer his time to help me search.”
“Constable,” the older woman repeated, giving Will a sidelong look. Will nodded, looking a little at a loss for words when confronted with the stink of spoiled perfume that wafted out the door.
“Yes, ma’am,” he finally managed in his best good-cop voice. “Any help would be appreciated.”
“I don’t know what help I can offer,” Mrs. Dowdey said dismissively. Then the Kittery Harbor Way kicked in as she added, “Other, perhaps, than inviting you in for a warm drink.” Will turned to Sunny, giving her a you’re-going-to-owe-me look.
Mrs. Dowdey led them into what had been a large, graceful center hall in the home’s original incarnation. A formal parlor stood off on the left, but the woman led to the right, down a short hallway with a drop ceiling, and into what would have been the family room if a family had been living there. Large glass windows let in pale daylight—and probably let out a lot of heat. No wonder Carolyn Dowdey was wearing a heavy sweater. And she had a large, high-end brocade reclining chair pulled right up in front of a built-in fireplace that seemed a little small for the room.
“How lovely,” Sunny lied through her teeth. “This looks like something Mr. Allerton would do.”
“That’s right.” Her hostess smiled, obviously pleased.
“A friend of my dad’s is considering some renovations, and that’s one of the contractors he’s considering. I understand he did a lovely job on Dr. Rigsdale’s office—the one in Portsmouth.”
“That’s true,” Mrs. Dowdey said, a bit less pleased at the turn in the conversation.
I wonder how much Allerton talked about that project? Sunny asked herself. Who might know about the secret panel?
“I heard he installed several exotic built-ins,” Sunny went on, keeping an eye on the other woman. Something was going on there, but she wasn’t sure what. “But there were some cost overruns. I guess you have to expect that with construction.”
“And with other things.” Mrs. Dowdey went to the fireplace, opening the glass doors that protected the hearth. She picked up the poker and turned to Will. “Would you mind, Constable?”
“Certainly not,” Will replied, stepping forward and reaching for the fireplace tool.
As he did, Carolyn Dowdey used it to whack him on the side of the head. Will went down in a heap.
“Overruns are all right when you’re adding on to a house,” the woman said to Sunny as if nothing had happened. “It’s a different thing when your pet’s life is at stake. Dr. Rigsdale deserved what I did to him.”
24
In the dimness beyond the ceiling, Shadow crouched, trying to sleep. Every movement he made raised a cloud of dust. How much longer could he stay up here? He’d explored every place he could get to and hadn’t found a way out.
Sooner or later, he’d come down for food or a drink, and the One Who Reeks would appear from behind the door. She’d find his hiding place and ensure he wouldn’t even have that empty escape.
Sunny, why did I leave you? For the thousandth time, he asked himself the question. And as he did, his ears suddenly flicked forward. He was wishing so hard, he thought he heard Sunny. Her voice seemed to come from the big room. Shadow charged along the metal path and squashed himself through the hole in the wall. Could it be? Had she found him?
As he came through, he heard a crash. Yes, that was definitely Sunny’s voice, getting louder.
*
“Excuse me?” Sunny popped out of her chair as Carolyn Dowdey advanced on her. “What are you doing?”
“Making sure I get to stay with my new cat,” Mrs. Dowdey said, hefting the poker. “Mrs. Purrley got sick, and everything that so-called doctor recommended just made her sicker—and cost more money. Intravenous this, surgical that, and in the end I was giving daily doses of something to keep her going from a syringe. And finally, when my poor cat just couldn’t keep going anymore, he suggested that she be put to sleep. Of course, he charged for that, too.”
“I’m sorry.” Sunny maneuvered to keep the chair between her and this crazy lady.
“And then, when Mrs. Purrley was gone, he gave me a movie disc that was supposed to make me feel better.” Mrs. Dowdey’s cat face wasn’t quivering; it was twitching. “It didn’t. And then he had the nerve to charge me for it! That was when I decided it was time to give Dr. Rigsdale some of his own medicine.”
Okay, that’s enough, Sunny decided. You’re younger and faster than this old woman. Just dodge around her, get out the door . . .
Before Sunny could try, Mrs. Dowdey launched a wild swing that struck the chair Sunny was sheltering behind. It toppled over.
Don’t know that I’m stronger. Sunny backpedaled, darting behind an occasional table. Mrs. Dowdey shattered the thing, knickknacks and all. “It was easy enough. Joe Allerton had mentioned that silly secret door. Dr. Rigsdale was at his desk, with his back to me. The first thing he said was, ‘Did you bring the money?’” She laughed, an ugly, rasping sound. “It was the last thing he said, too.”
She waved the poker. “I came prepared, you see, and I was lucky, too. It was easy enough use his chair to roll him into the examination room after I hit him. Getting him onto the table was a little more work, but I managed in the end. Then it was just a question of finding the right drug among his supplies. He’d already taught me how to do the injections for Mrs. Purrley.”
Her face crumpled a little at the memory of her cat but then brightened as she returned to her story. “I found a vein and emptied the hypodermic into it. His arm jerked, breaking off the tip, but he was well on his way by then. It’s remarkable, really, how easy it is to kill someone when you put your mind to it.”
Or when you lose your mind, Sunny thought. Got to get to the door. Can’t turn my back on her. She faked left, dodged right, and took cover for a moment behind another table. Her pursuer destroyed that one, too.
An irrelevant thought popped into Sunny’s head. This is going to cost a fortune to redecorate. After they clean up all the blood.
She tried to grab the poker from Carolyn’s grasp and nearly got her wrist broken for her trouble. Shaking her hand, Sunny ducked behind another chair. She was running out of furniture. This time when Mrs. Dowdey came at her, Sunny shoved the chair so it fell onto the woman. Carolyn stumbled back, and Sunny ran for the door. She got as far as the fireplace before a reflection in the glass door gave her a second’s warning.
Sunny ducked and rolled as that damned poker swooped through the spot where her head had been a moment before. She scrabbled back on her hands, knees, and butt. Carolyn Dowdey came straight at her, the poker raised in both hands to bring it down in a death stroke.
She paused for a second as a weird noise came from above—a keening, guttural, coughing and sneezing noise.
And then one of the ceiling panels gave way, and a furious, dusty cat came flying down.
Carolyn had twisted round to see what was going on. Shadow landed against her shoulder. He bounced one way, she went the other, crashing into the oversized recliner. It rocked back and flew open as Carolyn landed face-first against the back.
The woman recovered quickly, swarming over the arm of the chair as Sunny regained her feet.
“Enough!” Carolyn shouted, coming at Sunny again.
Then she let out a scream and lurched back. Shadow circled her legs, darting in to claw again. Carolyn swung low with the poker as Shadow danced away.
She’s right, Sunny decided. This is enough! She leaped onto Carolyn before the woman could swing at Shadow again. They rolled around in a confused and nasty struggle, Sunny choking and half-blinded by the stink of rancid perfume. And then Carolyn was over her again, teeth bared, her cat face murderous.
Is this the last thing a mouse sees? Sunny found herself wondering.
Then Shadow came whirling up
, going for Carolyn’s face. She reared back, Sunny bucked, the woman flopped on the floor . . .
And a foot came down on the poker.
Will weaved a little, but he had his gun out and pointed at Carolyn Dowdey.
“Get out of this house!” she screeched at him. “I’ll say you came in here and tried to rob me! Whatever you think you know, it’s not enough to prove anything!”
Sunny was using the opened recliner to pull herself to her feet when she suddenly stopped. “Or maybe not,” she said. “My dad had a chair like this in our living room. He and my mom got into an awful fight because she said he’d lost one of her silver spoons. Went on for months, until one day he pushed back to recline, and I saw something shiny in the piece of fabric that connects the footrest to the seat.”
On her feet now, she pointed to the hammocklike piece of brocade fabric. Nestled in it was a hypodermic syringe—a syringe with a broken needle.
Still on her knees, Carolyn Dowdey looked down, a dazed expression on her face. “I thought I brought it home, but I couldn’t find it. So I figured I must have lost it on the way.”
“Call 911,” Will told Sunny. “The sheriff’s going to be happy about one thing. This woman is going to another jurisdiction.”
*
Even with the fatal hypodermic turning up, Carolyn Dowdey might have made a long, drawn-out legal fight of it. But now that the cat was out of the bag—or the ceiling—she told the whole story to the officer who arrived, to Sheriff Nesbit, Detectives Trumbull and Fitch . . . and even to the news crews that quickly gathered. It was as if, after years of being alone, Mrs. Dowdey relished being the center of attention. As for Sunny, she just wanted to get done with the formalities of giving a statement and dealing with the media as quickly as possible. The big thing was to get Shadow safely home. Besides, he didn’t like the bright lights from the cameras.
It was a pretty odd-looking party that convened the next day. Both Will Price and Tobe Phillips sported shiners. Will also had a bandage over his cheekbone. Mike and Mrs. Martinson shared half the couch. Will sat on the other side, with Sunny on the floor at his feet. Across the room, Tobe had an armchair, and Jane sat on the floor.
Shadow occupied Sunny’s lap, purring away. He’d been very attached to her since coming home—sometimes literally. She had pulls in several sweaters from his attempts to climb on her.
“Are you ready?” Jane asked. “Start petting Shadow and making much of him. Let him know you love him.”
While Sunny did that, Jane reached into the bag at her side and took out Toby the pup. He had grown noticeably bigger already, but showed the same bumbling eagerness as before when Jane put his paws on the floor.
Toby spotted Shadow and, yipping like a nut, came toward him. Under Sunny’s hands, she could feel the cat’s muscles tense. But with Sunny holding him, Shadow held his ground until Toby came nose to nose with him.
The cat gave a deep sigh. Sunny wasn’t sure if that was annoyance or resignation. But he stayed there . . . until Toby suddenly came at him with a large, pink tongue.
Shadow tried to jump back, and Sunny lifted him to her shoulders. “Okay, that’s enough for a first try,” she said. “And for the time being, the new house rule is no licking.”
The others laughed and raised glasses. “No licking!”
“At least,” Will leaned forward to mutter, “not on the first date.”