Slow Dollar dk-9

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Slow Dollar dk-9 Page 17

by Margaret Maron


  We walked on down the busy midway, occasionally bumping into people we knew, though most were strangers. Invitations came thick and fast from the colorfully lit game stands to come on over and try our luck, test our skills, step right up and have a little fun.

  “You gonna win me a stuffed animal to guard my bedroom door?” I teased.

  He shot me a sidelong glance and his lips twitched. “Never noticed that you needed one,” he said dryly.

  That was so like the old Dwight that I laughed in relief and linked my arm through his.

  “What?” he said.

  “I really was afraid things might change between us,” I confessed. “But you were right. They haven’t, have they?”

  “Well, one thing’s changed,” he drawled. “Or weren’t you paying attention last night?”

  “Oh, I was paying attention.”

  The tingle was suddenly back and I could have jumped his bones right there. (It really had been a long dry summer.)

  “I even took notes,” I added demurely.

  As if reading my mind, he said, “How about we deliver April’s message and get out of here?”

  We drew near Tally’s Dozer, and remembering the errand I was on made my thoughts take a more serious turn.

  At first, I thought the game was unattended because I couldn’t see anyone looking out over the top. We went around to the door flap and I opened it to peer inside. “Tally?”

  She was seated on a low stool at the rear of the space, leafing through a magazine. “Oh, hey, Deborah! When did you get here?”

  She rose and came out to join us.

  “You know Major Bryant, of course.”

  “Oh yes.” Her smile was so like Andrew’s, I wanted to go right over to his house and throw him back under that cold shower. Anything to bring him to his senses.

  “Arnie told me how it all came out this evening. The kid that stole back his grandfather’s pictures? And the mother paid three-fifty to get them back? She must’ve really loved her father.”

  “More like she loved her son and was glad you and your husband weren’t pressing charges,” I told her.

  She gave a sad shrug. “Kids do crazy things sometimes.”

  I put out my hand to her. “Tally, April came to see you this morning while you were out at your place with Dwight here.”

  “Oh?”

  “She wanted to meet you and tell you to be sure to invite as many of your friends tomorrow as you like. She and some of my sisters-in-law—your aunts—will he serving lunch after the service, and they don’t know how to fix for less than an army.”

  That got a small smile. She started to speak when the booth on the far side of the Dozer suddenly exploded with flashing strobe lights and ear-piercing sirens that seemed to go on for a full ninety seconds. Everyone stopped in their tracks and turned to watch as the winner of the Bowler Roller stepped up to claim his prize.

  “Thank God that only happens about two or three times a night,” said Tally when the lights and siren finally cut off. “Flash is one thing, but that damn siren’s a killer.”

  “Pulls them in, though, doesn’t it?” I said, watching young men line up to try their luck at setting the bells and whistles off again.

  “That’s the whole point,” Tally said with a resigned shrug.

  One of her customers called for change, another was ready to cash in her prize chips. While we waited for her to come back, I glanced around the end of the tent where little children were splashing their hands in the water, trying for prizes at the duck pond. Across the way, a teenager was demonstrating to potential customers how easy it was to climb the rope ladder to reach the prizes at the top.

  From the other side of the Dozer tent came the entrancing odor of fried dough sprinkled with sugar and cinnamon. I was ready to follow my nose when Tally returned. Someone else immediately claimed her attention, though.

  “Hey, Tal?”

  A rough-looking man, late forties probably, with bloodshot eyes, full tattoos on both arms, and a day’s growth of whiskers leaned wearily against the end of the Dozer.

  “Sam? When did you get in?” Tally said. “Did you get them?”

  “Yeah, Arnie’s there. You seen Polly? How come she didn’t open up tonight?”

  Dwight and I followed their eyes across the crowd to where Polly’s Plate Pitch was still dark and shuttered.

  “She ain’t in the trailer and the girls say they ain’t seen her all day, neither.”

  Tally shook her head. “I don’t know, Sam. It’s been so crazy here. You want to go ahead and open it up for me?”

  “I’ll open it, but I can’t work it. I missed some of the road markers coming in and got turned around, wasted an hour. I gotta go get some sleep, Tal. I nearly run off the road just before I got here.”

  “That’s okay, I’ll find somebody. Here, Deborah,” she said, untying her money apron and handing it to me. “Mind the Dozer for me a minute? Make change? If anybody wants to cash in for a prize, ask them to wait or come back later, okay?”

  “Hey, wait!” I called. “I don’t think—”

  Too late. She had disappeared into the crowd, leaving me holding the bag in the shape of a money apron.

  “I don’t think this is something appropriate for a judge to be doing,” I told Dwight, who just shook his head in amusement.

  “Don’t look at me, shug. If it’s bad for a judge, think about a deputy sheriff.”

  “Oh, well. She’ll probably be back before anybody wants anything.”

  We stood there by the Dozer and watched as the man went over, pulled some keys from his pocket, and began unlocking the flaps. One part folded down to reveal the words POLLY’S PLATE PITCH in bright red letters. The other part folded up and locked into place. It was lined with small multicolored lights that began chasing themselves as soon as he flipped a switch. Stacks of shiny plates in all colors and sizes gleamed beneath the lights. The game is a simple one: You just toss a quarter onto any plate. If it stays in the plate, then you could win one of the large stuffed animals dangling from a rod in the back. After surfing some of the carnival sites on the web yesterday morning, I had learned that the harder it is to win, the bigger and nicer the prizes.

  Skee Matusik’s Lucky Ducky next door was a play-till-you-win with every player a winner. His prizes probably cost him a dime at the most. Same with the balloon race across from him. But the Bowler Roller, Polly’s Plate Pitch, and the rope climb next to it all had big prizes, so I knew they had to be a lot harder than they looked.

  “Change, please!” someone called from the Dozer, and I stepped up into the well of the wagon, took the woman’s two dollar bills, and handed back eight quarters from Tally’s money apron.

  It was fascinating to stand back here and watch quarters tumble over the side spills into the baskets beneath each station. I had a vague idea that the Harvest Festival Committee was supposed to get a percentage of the carnival’s take, but how was it decided? The honor system? I found myself thinking about cash-only businesses and the IRS. No paper trails here. How would the government go about guessing how much money the games on this lot took in? ‘Course that line of logic’s what got my daddy into trouble with the IRS all those years ago. He was never convicted for making or distributing white lightning. No, his conviction was for income tax evasion.

  “I’m ready to cash in,” said a man’s pompous voice from the other side, a voice I recognized at once.

  Reluctantly, I looked over the countertop and saw a startled Paul Archdale, the attorney who’d probably be running for my seat in the next election.

  “Judge? Judge Knott?” Disbelief and disapproval were in his eyes. “What on earth are you doing in there?”

  “Research,” I said blandly. “I thought I ought to see what goes on behind the scenes at a carnival so I can better understand why some of our rowdier citizens flip out. What about you?”

  “Supporting the festival,” he said with returning righteousness.

  He t
ried to hand me the poker chips he’d collected. I knew there was a system for equating chips with prizes, but I didn’t have a clue what it was.

  “My goodness,” I told Paul. “You have supported the festival here tonight if you’ve played long enough to get that many chips.”

  He flushed and muttered something about getting lucky.

  “I’m afraid you’ll have to come back in about ten minutes when the owner’s here,” I said. “I have no idea how the prizes work.”

  Archdale huffed away impatiently.

  Dwight was leaning against the end of the Dozer with a broad grin on his face. “Research?”

  I shrugged. “All I could think of.”

  Across the way, the man Tally called Sam finished opening the booth just as Tally reappeared with a young woman who didn’t look much older than sixteen or seventeen.

  We saw her giving the girl last-minute instructions, then the man left them with a weary wave of his hand and headed toward the trailer area. The girl stepped into the booth and smiled at the people who had immediately paused to play the simple-looking game.

  Tally started back through the throng to join us. Before she’d gotten halfway to us, though, screams pierced the air. Even the music pulsing through the loudspeakers was no match for the girl’s terror. Plates went crashing as she stumbled from the booth, wide-eyed and gibbering and pointing to the huge stuffed pandas and Sesame Street characters hanging at the back.

  Dwight rushed over and I followed.

  There among the prizes hung the body of a woman with bright red hair.

  Polly Viscardi.

  CHAPTER 15

  MONDAY NIGHT

  It was a repeat of Friday night, only this time it was me, not Sylvia Clayton, that Dwight was telling he’d see the next day. Unlike Sylvia, though, I didn’t split right away.

  The carnival was immediately closed down, of course, much to Paul Archdale’s dismay. As soon as the announcement came over the loudspeakers asking people to please clear the lot, he marched straight up to me and demanded his prize.

  “Prize?” I was outraged. “Paul, someone’s just been killed here.”

  “Yeah, and I’m real sorry about that,” he said stubbornly, “but I dropped thirty-seven dollars on this game and I’m not leaving without my prize.”

  “How many chips you got, Mister?” Tally said from inside the Dozer. “Four? Okay, here you go.”

  From the prize rack over her head, she unclipped a bubble pack that held a bright yellow-and-black submersible flashlight that looked like a knockoff of a name brand.

  As he walked away somewhat mollified, I muttered, “And may he use it to illuminate a place where the sun don’t shine.”

  Tally shot me a startled glance and gave an involuntary giggle. “And here I thought you were from the high-class side of the family.”

  “Don’t make any snap calls till you meet the rest of them,” I said, and went around to the front to start folding down the sides for her.

  All around us, the other game stands were being closed down, too, as uniforms took over the lot again, canvassing all the operators, asking if anyone had seen anything before Polly’s body was discovered. Patrol cars with flashing red and blue lights had converged on the midway till the EMS truck could barely squeeze past. Instead of loudspeakers with music and handheld mikes with pitches, the night air crackled with radioed dispatches.

  Down at the gate, a news van with a mobile transmitter had appeared and I saw someone from the Dobbs Ledger. I suspected that the media would be taking a second carnival death more seriously than the first time around.

  The man from the Bowler Roller had finished shutting up quickly, and when he came over to help tie down the tent flaps, Tally introduced us. “Deborah, this is Windy Raines. Believe it or not, Windy, she’s my aunt.”

  “Really? Now, how come I don’t have any aunts like you?” he said, leering rakishly, a leer spoiled by the fact that he was missing a couple of teeth and was probably nearing sixty.

  “Behave yourself,” Tally warned. “Her boyfriend’s that deputy sheriff over there.”

  I started to say Dwight wasn’t my boyfriend, then remembered that well, yes, he was. It was going to take some getting used to.

  Across the way, the crimescene van was back. Yellow tape looped around the Plate Pitch and floodlights lit up the interior till the stacks of glassware blazed in the glare. Beyond the hood of a patrol car, I saw Dwight in the center of a knot of men, both uniforms and civilians. I recognized Arnold Ames, Dennis Koffer, Skee Matusik, and a couple of prominent men who were on the county’s festival committee. A moment later, they were joined by an unfamiliar heavyset man who listened silently as Ames and Koffer appeared to be bringing him up to speed.

  “Ralph Ferlanski,” Tally told me. “The other owner. He owns the Ferris wheel and Tilt-A-Whirl and the swings.”

  “And the generators,” Windy reminded her with a hint of bitterness in his tone.

  “And the generators,” she agreed equably, not letting herself get drawn into whatever problem he had with the other owner.

  “God, this is bad as a hurricane,” said Skee Matusik, who had evidently been invited to take himself away from the Plate Pitch area. “They’re saying tomorrow may be dark, too.”

  “The hell you say!” Windy Raines exclaimed. “How they expect us to make our nut?”

  “The teenagers’ll be back for you guys,” Matusik said bitterly, “but I might as well go on and make the jump now. Nobody’s gonna bring the kiddies out to a place where somebody’s getting killed every time you turn around.”

  Tally’s jaw tightened, and I looked down at the scrawny little man coldly. “In case you’ve forgotten, Tally’s son is one of those people who got killed, and I’m sure he didn’t lie down and die just so you could have a bad day. Any more than that poor woman over there.”

  “Oh, hey, Tal! I’m sorry. You know I didn’t mean it like that. Polly and me, we might not’ve got along, but you know how much Irene and me loved Braz.”

  “It’s okay,” she said wearily.

  “Lord, lordy,” said Raines. “Polly gone, too. Midway’s not gonna be the same without that redheaded spitfire keeping the ashes stirred.”

  We finished securing the Dozer and tying the tent flaps closed.

  Thanks to Dwight, I found myself sneaking close looks at their footgear. Tonight all three wore those unisex leather work shoes with thick soles. Raines’s were calf high lumberjacks, laced with leather strings, while Tally’s were regular low-tops laced with round cords. Matusik’s were ankle-high with regular brown laces that stopped two holes short of the top pair. His and Tally’s shoes left ridge patterns in the dirt, but Raines’s were so old that if they’d ever had a tread, they were now too worn to show. On the other hand, they didn’t seem to have been cleaned lately and the discolorations looked like normal dirt and grease to me. Certainly no huge blotches of dried blood on the dark brown leather to say they’d stomped a young man to death three nights ago.

  Having finished with the Dozer, Tally moved on to the ears-and-floss wagon next door, but the two young women working there—Candy and Tasha—had everything under control, they said, and were almost finished. Both were teary over Polly’s death.

  “They bunked in together,” Tally told me as I followed her down to their other grab wagon, the one that sold corn dogs and cold drinks. “Candy, Tasha, Eve, and Kay. Kay’s the one found her. They bunk at one end of the trailer next to us, and Polly and Sam bunked at the other end. Polly’s been like their den mother this time out.”

  We found the other grab wagon empty and abandoned. Tally wasn’t surprised.

  “Towners!” she muttered, swinging up into the wagon. “Eve and Kay were working this one alone because our regular cook’s been stoned since Friday afternoon, but I had to pull Eve off yesterday to work the Guesser, so we hired someone local to help Kay. Then tonight when I pulled Kay off to cover for Polly, the new girl said she could handle it. Ever
ything was all made. She would’ve had to keep moving, but really, there’s nothing to it. Looks like she took off the minute we left, though.”

  She checked the money box beneath the counter. Empty. “Another no surprise,” Tally said grimly.

  The window counters and grill were a mess.

  There was a bucket of clean soapy water under one of the counters. I hung my jacket on the outside knob, stepped up into the wagon, squeezed out the dishcloth, and got busy.

  “What are you doing?” Tally asked. “You’ll wreck your clothes.”

  “They’re washable,” I said, glad that I’d chosen to wear a cotton pantsuit and low shoes this morning.

  “But you’re a judge.”

  “So? I’m also a pair of hands, and you can use some help.”

  While she turned off the grease vat, stowed the food in a refrigerated chest under the counter, and moved stuff out of my way, I washed off everything that felt greasy or sticky. We made a good team. There’s something about working together that lets down the roadblocks and fosters trust. Soon she was telling me about Polly Viscardi.

  “We’ve known her for years, Arnie and me. She and Irene were good friends, too, but this is the first time she’d traveled with us. She was a player, all right.”

  “How do you mean?”

  “You met her, didn’t you?”

  “Not really. We tossed a few quarters at her plates, but I can never get anything to stick, and then I saw her with you Friday night.” I remembered bright red hair, the pink laces on her shoes, and that off-the-shoulder ruffled blouse as she flirted with the men in our party to encourage them to keep tossing quarters. “She seemed...” I tried to find the right words. “I don’t know. She looked very feminine, but I felt she might be sort of hard underneath?”

  “That was Polly, all right. She had an eye for anything in pants, but they didn’t get in her pants unless she saw a use for them. Like poor old Sam. He was just a roughie at the beginning of the season and she was shacking with Mike, our cook. Then one day, boom! Mike was back in the bunkhouse and Sam was in her bed, okay? I don’t think either of them knew what hit ‘em.”

 

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