A Crafty Killing (11 page)

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Authors: Lorraine Bartlett

BOOK: A Crafty Killing
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Katie glanced at the blue-ink signature on the loan. It bothered her that Ezra died the day he was to collect. Had the person confronted Ezra, asking for more time, been denied, and then murdered him for a lousy five thousand dollars? As Deputy Schuler had said, people were killed for a lot less. Either way, whoever borrowed the money owed it to the estate. And five thousand dollars would help keep the creditors from Artisans Alley’s door.
No matter what, she ought to at least let Detective Davenport know about the loan. It could be a motive for murder.
She dialed the number on the card Davenport had given her on the day Ezra’s body had been found, and listened to it ring four times before voice mail picked up. “You have reached the office of Detective Ray Davenport. Leave your name and number at the tone and I’ll get back to you.”
Swell
, Katie thought. He was probably watching the football game on TV. Okay, so she didn’t like the man. Still, she did as instructed, figuring Davenport would no doubt get back to her on Monday morning. She told him she had something important to tell him concerning Ezra, left her name and number, and hung up the phone. As Katie sat back in her chair, a flash of movement caused her to look up.
Vance stood in the doorway. “I owe you an apology,” he said, and took a step forward.
Katie leaned forward and laid a file folder over the loan agreement. No need to advertise it. “What for?”
“I didn’t give you an explanation of why I can’t manage Artisans Alley. It was . . .” He trailed off, and then said, “Rude of me.”
She waited for him to continue.
Vance didn’t meet her gaze. “See, my wife. She’s sick. She’s got MS. I need to take care of her. And, well, I can’t promise I’d be available to be at Artisans Alley every day.”
A logical explanation she didn’t for a moment believe. Her great-aunt Lizzie always said a man who wouldn’t look you in the eye had something to hide. Vance was definitely hiding something.
“Thanks for telling me,” Katie said, knowing her voice sounded cold. It wasn’t Vance’s fault she was in this mess. She ought to blame Ezra as much as anyone, but she knew he’d much prefer to be sitting here worrying about unpaid loans and the mass of bills than embalmed at the funeral home.
“Do you know if any of the other vendors has business experience and might be able to step in?”
Vance shook his head. “Most of us are retired and do this as a hobby. We all depended on Ezra to handle the paperwork, the advertising—everything. Chad set up the computer so that we would get weekly printouts. Ezra liked to hand-write the checks, although the computer can do it. They go out on Tuesdays, you know.”
Not this week
, Katie thought. “It’s going to take me a while to figure out how to do all that.”
“I can help,” he offered. “I just can’t do it on a regular basis.”
“Could you be available this week?”
“I’ve ...” He hesitated. “I’ve got things to do tomorrow. And Ezra’s funeral is Tuesday. You weren’t planning on opening that day, were you?”
“I haven’t decided. Probably not. With no one to manage the place, I may not reopen until Saturday.”
Vance’s eyes widened angrily. “You’ll piss off a lot of the artists if you do that.”
“Maybe it’ll motivate someone to find us a manager,” she said, making sure to keep her voice level.
Vance seemed to squirm within his clothes. “I’ve got to get going. I’ve written out a list of instructions,” he said and handed her a folded piece of paper. “Can you close by yourself?”
The last person who’d closed by himself was dead, Katie reminded herself. She glanced at her watch: four twenty-nine.
“Sure,” she said, with more conviction than she felt.
“I’m sorry, Katie,” Vance said again.
“Don’t worry about it. You must put your family first.”
Vance swallowed and looked like he wanted to say something—then thought better of it—and turned to leave her office.
Katie sighed, uncovered the loan agreement, and stared at the Courier typeface. Ezra had probably written up the agreement on the old portable typewriter that sat in the corner. Was that so there was no record in the computer, or had the computer only been there for Chad and Vance’s use?
Katie bit her lip. She should put the document somewhere safe. But first she’d make two photocopies on the tabletop copier behind her. Placing the original on the platen, she did just that. Folding one of the copies, she put it in her purse, then made a new file folder tab and put the other copy and original away in the cabinet.
Next, she read through the paper Vance had given her. Neatly printed block letters guided her through every step needed to close the place. Step one, warn the customers that Artisans Alley closed in twenty minutes, and then after they were all gone, lock the doors and do a walk-through to make sure the place was secure. Empty the cash registers and lock the day’s receipts in the safe. Only she didn’t have the combination to the safe. Did Vance? Maybe she could lock them in the file cabinet. It wasn’t the best solution, but she didn’t want to take that kind of money home and make herself a target for a mugging either.
Katie looked up at the ugly plywood covering the hole where her window had been and sighed. “Oh, Chad, why did you have to die and leave me in this mess? You, too, Ezra.”
She read through Vance’s list a couple more times, memorizing it, before heading for the cash desk. She picked up the phone and pressed the public address button. “Artisans Alley will be closing in twenty minutes. Please bring your purchases to the front desk. Closing in twenty minutes.”
Rose Nash, manning Cash Desk 1, with a string of five customers in line, gave her a thumbs-up and a smile. She had no wrapper, so Katie stepped in to help. Katie recognized one of the women as having been standing behind the door at opening. Could she have been shopping at Artisans Alley for nearly seven hours?
“Oh, isn’t this cute,” Rose proclaimed, examining a small, handmade greeting card in a clear protective sleeve. She removed the gummy price tag from the plastic. “Someone’s birthday coming up?”
“My sister’s,” the woman said proudly.
“Tell her ‘Happy Birthday’ from Artisans Alley,” Rose said. “That’ll be three dollars plus tax.”
The woman handed over a fistful of dollars and change. Katie eased the card into a small brown paper bag before handing giving it to the customer.
“Will we see you tomorrow?” Rose asked.
“Maybe,” the blond-wigged older woman said with a shrug. “Have a nice evening.”
“You, too!”
The customer walked away.
Rose turned to Katie. “She’s our best customer. Comes in every day. Now if we could just get her to buy something over five dollars, we’d all get rich.”
Katie smiled, but it quickly turned to a frown. Artisans Alley’s income came from renting vendor space to the artists, but if their sales were so lackluster, it was no wonder they found it hard to pay their rents.
Within minutes Artisans Alley emptied out, and Katie followed the last customer to the door and locked up for the night.
The tag room was just to the left of the main double doors. Clad in her raincoat and scarf, Ida exited the little room and turned off the light. “Hi, Katie. All but the last batch of tags have been sorted and taped down,” she reported. When Katie had last ducked into what she had begun to think of as “Ida territory,” she’d seen the older woman bent over the table, carefully lining up the price tags that had been removed from merchandise.
“See you on Tuesday,” Ida chirped and headed for the side—vendor—exit.
“We won’t be open on Tuesday,” Katie called. “Tuesday is Ezra’s funeral.”
Ida stopped short. “Oh, dear. But I’m used to coming in here on Tuesdays. What will I do if I can’t come here?”
Was her routine that engrained? “Stay home?” Katie suggested.
“Why would I do that?”
“Because Artisans Alley will be locked up. We won’t be open.”
Ida seemed to need time to think about that. “Oh.”
“Perhaps you’ll consider attending Ezra’s funeral service on Tuesday morning.”
Ida frowned. “Maybe.” She started off toward the vendor exit once more, her steps slower.
Katie waited until the woman was out of earshot before she turned to Rose. “Does Ida have some kind of emotional or mental problem?”
“I’d say so. She calls that big ugly wart on her cheek a beauty mark, which is certainly not what I’d call it.”
Nor would Katie.
Rose giggled. “I told you she had more than one screw loose.” She changed the subject. “I’ll do the walk-through with you if you’d like,” Rose volunteered, and she stayed until Katie had completed every task on Vance’s list before she retrieved her coat from the tag room.
“You did great today, Katie,” Rose said, her good cheer giving Katie a much-needed boost of confidence.
“Thanks, Rose.”
“Are you leaving now? We could walk out together.”
Katie shook her head. “I have a few more things to do in the office, then I’ll be off.”
“Do you want me to wait with you?” Rose asked, sounding anxious.
“Oh, no. You’ve been on your feet all day at that register. I’ll be fine here alone.”
Rose pulled out a silk kerchief from her coat pocket and tied it around her tight blond curls. “Then I’ll see you tomorrow night at the funeral home,” she said, her voice cracking. She swallowed hard, and Katie gently patted her shoulder. Then Rose cleared her throat and straightened. “I’ll say good night, then.”
Katie walked her to the door and locked it behind Rose before heading back for her office. Artisans Alley felt cavernous and empty without another living soul within it, and she found the silence unnerved her. Katie took the paper sack full of cash, checks, and credit card receipts from the two registers and locked them in the back of one of the file cabinets, crossing her fingers that the burglar wouldn’t make a return visit.
She tidied up the desk and remembered the lack of dinner opportunities in her refrigerator at home. About the only things in her cupboard were bags of flour and sugar, a couple of cans of cat food, and a bag of kitty kibble for her cat, Mason. Her wallet was empty, thanks to the pizza and soda she’d paid for the previous night, and she didn’t feel up to a trip to the grocery store and the ATM machine. Maybe kitty kibble would make a good snack, after all. In the meantime, she plucked a butterscotch sweet from her pocket, unwrapped it, popped it into her mouth, and crunched it—letting the chunks of sweetness begin to dissolve on her tongue.
Pocketing her keys, she shrugged into her jacket, collected her purse, and headed for the side exit, turning out lights as she went. Finally, only the light from the exit sign over the door to the showroom pierced the gloom. The darkness pressed in around her, sending a shiver of unease down her neck.
Ezra had died only feet from where she now stood. Murdered. Probably by somebody he’d known.
Katie turned her back on the shadows and set the burglar alarm as Vance had taught her to do the night before, and then she locked the door behind her. As she groped her way down the short dark corridor toward the outside door, she pulled her car keys from her pocket and promptly dropped them.
“Swell,” she grated, stooping down to paw the drafty floor.
Had Ezra’s murderer made his—or her—escape down this same corridor? Mary Elliott had found the door open the next morning, assuming Ezra had opened it for the vendors, but it had apparently never been locked the night before.
Snagging her keys, Katie straightened, fumbled for the handle, and turned it, throwing open the door and welcoming the cold evening air as she fled the enclosed space. The door banged shut.
A furtive glance around the near-empty parking lot told Katie several mercury vapor lights had burned out, leaving the sea of asphalt around the building bathed in shadows. Was the Merchants Association responsible for the lot’s upkeep? How were Artisans Alley’s customers going to feel safe when she didn’t?
She turned her back to the Square, glancing at the tall bushes in need of pruning that flanked the doorway. Another job she’d see was done within the week.
Wedging her purse under her arm, Katie inserted the brass key in the lock, turned it, and jumped as something jabbed her in the ribs.
“Stick ’em up!”
Seven
Katie whirled, arms flailing, her heart pounding as she beat at the intruder with her purse.
“Hey, hey!” Andy Rust protested, covering his head, shying back from the blows.
Katie jumped back, crashing into the closed door. “What the heck do you think you’re doing?”
Silhouetted in the dim light, Andy thrust his hands in his pockets, managing to look like a guilty schoolboy. “The lot was nearly empty. I was worried about you closing all alone. It was just a little joke. Sorry if I scared you.”
She hoped the heat of her glare would singe his hair. “Next time, don’t do me any favors.”
“I said I was sorry. Look, come on over to my shop and let me make amends. A nice jolt of cola ought to pick you right up.”
Katie sized him up. He did look contrite. “Include a slice of pizza and you’ve got a deal.”
“How about a nice fresh calzone?”
“I could go for that,” she admitted, grateful her dinner dilemma was now history.
Within minutes Katie had shed her jacket and sat atop a stool inside the pizzeria, sipping a Coke and watching Andy behind the counter, tossing pizza dough into the air with flair. A string of teenaged boys came and went, taking pizzas in padded hot covers out to their cars for delivery. Andy had one assistant assigned to the ovens while he fabricated each of the pizzas. The guys worked like a well-oiled machine, one taking the phone orders when the other was too busy to do so.
“You two move like a choreographed dance,” Katie marveled, nearly burning her mouth on the steaming-hot and tasty cheese-and-pepperoni calzone.

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