by Kylie Logan
Chapter Seven
YES, I SAID I WAS GOING TO MAKE SURE KAZ EARNED HIS room and board. That didn’t mean I trusted him to keep things running smoothly there in my breakfast meeting turned feeding frenzy. Luckily, I spotted Helen in the crowd of mimosa drinkers, and even before I could beg for her help, she volunteered to do whatever I needed. To show her how much I appreciated it, I officially put Kaz at her beck and call.
That taken care of, I invited Daryl to join me for coffee at the Starbucks across the street.
Oh yeah, I was dying to talk to him right there in the hospitality suite and ask what he meant when he said he knew who killed Thad. But I am smarter than that, even on mornings when I haven’t had enough sleep the night before, thanks to murder and the fact that, all night, I could hear my ex gently snoring in my living room. I’d already seen the news of Thad’s death spread through the community of usually levelheaded button collectors like kudzu on steroids, and I wasn’t taking any chances. If Daryl and I were going to have a heart-to-heart (in a murder-investigation sort of way only, of course), and if Daryl was going to name a suspect, I couldn’t let word of our conversation get out. Especially not if the suspect happened to be someone at the conference. Or if just talking to me might somehow put Daryl in danger.
Discretion was the best course of action.
Honest, the fact that Starbucks served my favorite, Caffè Misto, and the hotel didn’t have a coffee that came even close, had nothing to do with it.
So even though I was itching to grill Daryl, I kept my mouth shut as we walked through the lobby side by side, and outside while we waited for the light to turn so we could head across the street.
I wanted to make sure no one was watching.
And that no one overheard whatever he was going to tell me.
“So…” I’d waited long enough, and once I had my coffee and sat down opposite Daryl at a table far from the window, I couldn’t wait a moment longer. “What did you mean, Daryl, about knowing who killed Thad? How do you—”
“Well, I guess I can’t say for sure.”
My heart sank, and yes, I admit, I was a little cranky. Lack of sleep, remember, and Kaz on my couch. “If this was some kind of goofy way for you to get me alone—”
Daryl’s eyes glimmered behind those Coke-bottle glasses of his. “Is that what you think?” He smiled. And twitched. “Are button collectors always so narcissistic?”
“Am I? Narcissistic?” Call me crazy, but as dorky as Daryl was, I was more than a bit surprised he not only knew the word, but could use it properly in a sentence. “You said you had to talk to me alone. Naturally, I thought—”
“That I was coming on to you.”
“No.” I popped the top on my cup of coffee, the better to keep my hands busy so I didn’t reach across the table and punch ol’ Daryl in the nose. “You’re the one who said you needed to talk to me, Daryl. You said it was because you knew who killed Thad.”
“And you don’t believe me. You don’t think it’s possible for a guy like me to know important things. You think I’m just another button collector.”
My shoulders shot back. “And what’s wrong with being a button collector?” I demanded. “Some of my best friends are button collectors. I’m a button collector. As a whole, button collectors are educated, interesting, well read, and a heck of a lot better company than a lot of the non–button collectors I’ve met. If you think being a button collector means being boring—”
“Doesn’t it?” Daryl’s eyes were so big and so sincere that I wanted to give him a shake.
Instead, I pulled in a breath. “Look…” I gripped my coffee cup and let the warmth seep into my fingers, through my hands, up my arms. Once it had soothed and calmed me, I knew it was safe to speak again. “I think we got this conversation off on the wrong foot. So let’s start again. Back at the hotel, you told me you thought you knew who killed Thad Wyant.”
“Yes. I did.” Daryl had ordered a cup of green tea and he dip, dip, dipped the bag into the steaming water. “Maybe… Maybe I just got carried away. You know, with all the excitement and all those people at the meeting asking about Mr. Wyant and what you knew about the investigation. That’s why I thought I should talk to you. You seem…” He carefully removed the bag from his cup, set it on his saucer, and stirred sugar into his tea. “You seem to know an awful lot,” he said when he was done. “About the investigation, I mean. Like you’re some kind of… oh, I don’t know… like you’re somehow connected with the police.”
“Only because I was the one the security guard came to when he found the body.” It seemed a simpler explanation than telling Daryl about the murder I’d already solved and how I sometimes dated the lead detective on the case. “I was the one who called 911.”
He thought this over and nodded. “So if the police… If they knew anything about what really happened, they would tell you.”
“No way.” As if it would actually put some distance between me and what Daryl inferred, I scraped my chair back from the table. “They don’t talk about cases. Not with civilians. And I’m definitely a civilian.”
“Then maybe I shouldn’t have mentioned it to you at all. You know, about what I saw.”
Another deep breath as I thought over how I was going to handle this. I’d just come right out and told Daryl that when it came to investigating, I was as far from being professional as it was possible to get. But he had turned to me in confidence. And besides, I was dying to find out what he knew.
“I’ve helped the police,” I admitted. “Once before. A little. And since I’m chair of the conference—”
“They want you to help again. Of course. So you were the right one to come to.”
“Maybe.” How’s that for wishy-washy? “Why don’t you tell me what you think you know. Then we can take it from there and see if it’s something you should talk to Nev—I mean, Detective Riley about.”
It was clear that Daryl wasn’t the type who jumped into decisions. He thought over this one while he sipped his tea. “I was at the banquet last night. You remember, Josie, because we were sitting near each other.”
He was right. My chair and Daryl’s were back to back.
I nodded and waited for him to go on.
“And we talked. And then my phone rang, and I went out to the lobby to take the call. It was the least I could do. I mean, don’t you think people talking on their cell phones in public… Don’t you think it’s the rudest thing ever?”
We weren’t there to pass judgment on other people’s manners. Eager for him to continue, I leaned forward.
He got the message. “I was standing in the lobby talking on my phone and… well, that’s when I saw him.”
“Thad Wyant?”
“Yes.” The artwork on the wall nearest to where we were sitting was pretty nondescript, but Daryl studied it for a long moment. “He was outside,” Daryl said. “In front of the hotel.”
“And… ?”
“And he was with another man. They were arguing.”
“You were inside, and they were outside? How do you know they were arguing?”
Daryl scrunched up his face, and his glasses rode up the bridge of his nose. He adjusted them before he said, “Well, you can tell, can’t you? I mean, just by looking at people. Mr. Wyant’s face… Well, I didn’t know the man at all, but I remember seeing him on the cruise the other night, and he seemed…”
Something told me Daryl was thinking exactly what I was thinking, and what I was thinking was that when we saw Thad together on the cruise, Thad was arguing with Beth Howell.
“Well, I guess the cruise doesn’t count,” he said, confirming my suspicion. “That was an awkward moment for Mr. Wyant and that woman, whoever she was.” He looked at me to supply that information, and since I didn’t want to get off track, I didn’t say a word.
Daryl sighed. “A man as well respected as Mr. Wyant, he must be studious and careful and knowledgeable, right?” He didn’t wait for my answer, but ga
zed over my head with a faraway look in his eyes. “That’s not how he looked when he was talking to that man outside the hotel. Mr. Wyant’s face, it was red and his hands were… you know…” Demonstrating, Daryl curled both his hands into fists. “A couple times, Mr. Wyant even pointed his finger in the other man’s face.”
“And how did that man react?”
“He was even madder than Mr. Wyant. His eyes were all squinched up. You know…” Daryl gave me what was supposed to be a sinister glare. Coming from Daryl, it was more of a puppy-dog look, but I didn’t let on. There was no use spoiling things for him. “He got up real close in Mr. Wyant’s face, and… Well, I don’t know what he said. I couldn’t hear. But I can tell you this; whatever it was, it wasn’t pretty and it wasn’t friendly.”
“Was the man anyone you recognized from the conference?”
I didn’t even realize I’d slipped right into investigation mode until I saw the way Daryl smiled knowingly. I hadn’t meant to be that obvious, and I started to make an excuse, but he didn’t give me a chance to finish it.
“You are working with the police,” he said. “That’s good. Because I’ll tell you what, Josie. I can tell you’re smart. And they’re going to need somebody smart to help them figure this out.” Daryl tipped his head back. “Was the man someone I recognized from the conference?” He paused, thought about it, shook his head. “No. And I don’t think he was from the conference. Because he was wearing a raincoat. You know, like he’d come into the hotel from the outside. Or like he was outside waiting for Thad. If he was part of our conference, he would have been down at the banquet, and he wouldn’t have needed a coat.”
It was a good point, and I reminded myself to mention it to Nev when I recounted what Daryl told me.
“The police will want to hear about this from you,” I said out loud.
Daryl’s shoulders shot back. “Do you think they will?” Just as quickly, he folded in on himself and glanced from side to side, as if he was afraid someone might be watching. “Do you think… Do you think I saw the killer?”
“I can’t say, and you can’t, either, so there’s no use worrying about it.” It was the truth, so I didn’t feel guilty for trying to soothe his fears. “But I’ll make sure I mention it to Detective Riley, and I’m sure he’ll want to talk to you. He’ll probably have you work with a police sketch artist. You know, to come up with a drawing of the man in the raincoat.”
The muscles of Daryl’s jaw tightened. His eye twitched. “I can do that,” he said. “I mean, if it will help the police, I will do it. But only…” He glanced at me quickly, then glanced away. “Will you come with me when I talk to them?” he asked. “I mean… as a friend?”
Was Daryl a friend?
I wouldn’t go so far as to say that, but I wasn’t stupid. If it took having someone along for Daryl to feel comfortable enough to tell Nev what he knew, I wasn’t about to question it.
I promised I’d be right there at his side.
I was saved from any further uncomfortable revelations about friendship when the beeping alarm on my cell phone went off.
The sound hit me like that bell in Pavlov’s dog experiment, and I shoved the paper top on my coffee cup and rose from the table, scrambling to get organized. “Oh my gosh. We’ve got judging this morning! I completely forgot about the button competition. Helen’s supposed to be supervising the judging, and I left her at the breakfast. She’s going to need plenty of help, and I can’t leave her high and dry.”
Daryl clutched his teacup with both hands. “I’m not nearly good enough to enter competitions yet,” he said.
I was just reaching for my purse, and Daryl touched his hand to mine. Normally, I would have been on my toes enough to see it coming. Or at least cool enough to extricate my hand slowly.
The way it was, my head was spinning with all Daryl had told me about the man Thad Wyant had argued with, and my heart was doing the sort of tap dance it always did when judging was about to start and I was involved in seeing that everything was in order, working smoothly, and as impartial to our contestants as it was possible to be.
I guess that explained why I stood there and stared.
“Thank you,” Daryl said, increasing the pressure on my hand just enough to make the encounter shoot right past friendly to uncomfortable. “I won’t forget this, Josie. In my book, we didn’t really need Thad Wyant here. You’re the real star of this button conference.”
I WASN’T FEELING much like a star.
Then again, I wasn’t exactly liking the attention I was getting from Daryl, either.
I reminded myself to keep my distance, and next time Daryl mentioned the police, it might not hurt to say something about the fact that Nev and I were an almost-couple. Stretching the truth? Yeah, a little. But all in the name of getting Daryl to back off.
The thought firmly in mind, I headed back to the hotel and right into the conference room where the button judging would begin in just another hour. Sounds like a lot of time, doesn’t it? Believe me, it’s not. Not when there’s so much to do before the judging can even begin.
See, when a person enters a tray of buttons in a contest, that tray needs to be cataloged and put into the box with the other trays in that category. And the categories… Well, in a show as big as this one, there were dozens of categories and hundreds of button collectors vying for first, second, and third place in each one. Our teams of judges would be looking at pewter buttons and glass buttons and buttons with birds on them and buttons that featured pictures of women and flowers and…
Suffice it to say that it was a huge job, and it took teams of dedicated volunteers to make it all happen.
Helen, of course, was the most dedicated of them all, and she had plenty of help from the most dedicated of our members, including Gloria Winston. I was glad. Gloria might be a tad bluff, but she was thorough and well respected. She was also always levelheaded and objective. Those were two of the most important assets for any judge.
Just as the thought occurred, I watched as the door to the conference room swung open, and Helen marched in along with Gloria and the volunteers, who would do a final count of the trays and make sure all the paperwork that went with them was checked and rechecked.
“I’m so sorry.” The words were out of my mouth before she was even close. “I forgot.”
“About the button competition?” I couldn’t blame Helen for sounding so incredulous. Or for giving her fellow volunteers a look that pretty much came right out and said she was hearing it, but she wasn’t believing it. There was a time Josie Giancola never would have let anything get between her and a button competition. Of course, that was the time before murder entered her life.
“I know. I know.” Because Helen hadn’t moved, I stepped forward and took the pile of scoring sheets she was carrying out of her hands. Talk about symbolism! I guess I was doing what I could to lighten her load. “It’s just that—”
“You were busy with other things. Of course.”
Leave it to Helen to be understanding. Even when I didn’t deserve it.
“I got sidetracked.” Because I was too embarrassed to admit my shortcomings to Helen, my mentor and my friend, I glanced around at the other volunteers, all women and all of whom looked just as disappointed as Helen did. In fact, Gloria was so puckered, she looked as if she’d just sucked on a lemon. “I’m here now. And everything is organized, and—”
“That’s because I was here at six this morning.” Helen didn’t say this like it was any big deal; she was just reporting the facts. Her chin came up a fraction of an inch, and her cheeks had two bright spots of color in them the same shade as the pink sweater she was wearing with neat khakis and cute little loafers that had buttons slipped into the slot on the front where some people put pennies. “I knew you’d be distracted, Josie. You were bound to be, with all that happened last night. I mean, really, how can something like that not affect your performance here at the conference? Even the chair of an event as important
as this can’t keep that many balls in the air.”
“But she should be able to. I should be able to.” Another glance around by way of apology. “I’m here now and—”
My cell phone rang.
I held up one finger as a way of excusing myself and saying I’d be right back, turned my back on the woefully wronged committee, and crossed to a quiet corner of the room.
“Hey.”
“Hi, Nevin.”
“I’m up in Thad Wyant’s room. I thought maybe you’d want to come up and have a look around.”
I glanced over my shoulder at the waiting committee. “I would. I can. But—”
“There’s a bunch of button stuff up here.” I could tell by the way his voice faded that Nev was taking a look around the room. “I could use your help. You know, to explain what all this stuff is and what it’s for.”
“Are there…” I could barely get the words out from behind the sudden ball of emotion that blocked my throat. “Have you found the Geronimo button?”
“Got me!” Nev didn’t chuckle often, which made the sound all the more startling. “That’s why I need your help up here, Josie. You’re the expert.”
I was.
And I was also the chair of a conference that was quickly spinning out of control.
I clicked off the call and crossed the room. Helen met me halfway.
“Don’t even say it.” She patted my arm. “I can tell by that look in your eyes. You’re on a mission.”
I grimaced. “The police need my help, and—”
“Of course they do, dear. You’re smart and you’re knowledgeable and—”
“And the judging is going to start soon.”
“We’ve got everything under control.” Helen’s cadre of volunteers had followed at a discreet distance. When she looked over her shoulder, they nodded in unison. “See? No problemo.” Helen gave me a nudge toward the door. “Go do what you need to do; I’ve got everything under control.”