“Possibly. I don't think Walter's the murderer. Nonetheless, Kathleen, you should leave it to me to investigate the people who were on the outs with Daryl. I'm already dead.”
She shook her head sharply. “Bill's in trouble. I have to find out everything I can. I wish I hadn't thrown that phone in the lake. But I'll get that information to the police chief someway. I've figured out why Bill won't tell the chief anything. He's probably protecting Irene Chatham. She'sâ”
I interrupted. “The light-fingered member of the Altar Guild.” I enjoyed Kathleen's look of awe, but felt compelled to reveal my source. “I checked the church pictorial directory.”
Kathleen paced. “In between working at the church, I've looked everywhere for Irene.”
“She's on my list, Kathleen.” My tone was reproving. Had I learned it from Wiggins?
Kathleen ignored me. “Every time I tried to talk to Isaac, he was surrounded by people wanting him to carry something or move something.”
I topped the crackers with cheese slices and carried my plate to the table.
She watched disapprovingly. “One of these days somebody's going to walk in and see dishes up in the air and the fat will be in the fire.”
I smiled and enjoyed my snack. “That may be.” Food soothes me and my tone was equable. “Kathleen, sit down and relax. We'll find out more tomorrow.”
She continued to pace. “Tomorrow I have to help get everything ready for the Spook Bash. I won't have a free minute.”
I felt great relief. I didn't want Kathleen to stir up the quiescent tiger. “I'll see to everything.”
She'd paused by the cake stand, lifted it to look in surprise at Bayroo's cake.
I explained about the birthday gift and her face softened in a smile. Then once again she looked worried. “I'm going to try again to catch Irene.” She walked toward the phone, but stopped to stare at a slate on a stand next to the telephone. A message was written in red chalk:
7:45
P.M
. Urgent. Dad, call Isaac. He's upset. Something about a wheelbarrow and the police. Gone to skate with Lucinda. Home about nine-thirty.
“Oh.” Kathleen looked faint.
I lost my appetite.
She ran for her car. I was already in the passenger seat, waiting.
The brick bungalow's front
shutters gleamed with recent paint in the porch light. Late-blooming pansies added color to the front flower bed. A red candle burned brightly in a toothy jack-o'-lantern on a front step. A skeleton in a pink tutu dangled from a planter hook in the porch ceiling. An engraved nameplate by the doorbell read
ISAAC AND EVELYN FRANKLIN.
Kathleen rang the doorbell. She'd insisted that she be the one to talk to Isaac. I insisted I would accompany her, though unseen.
The door opened. Isaac Franklin was on the shady side of fifty, lined dark face, silvered hair, but he looked muscular and fit. The minute he saw Kathleen, his grim expression altered. “Come in, Mrs. Kathleen. You come right in.”
Kathleen stepped inside. “Isaac, what's this about your wheelbarrow?”
He folded his arms, frowned. “I don't hold with taking a man's
work tools. Like I said, if a body can't report mischief without stirring up a hornet's nest, I don't know what the world's coming to.”
A plump pretty woman bustled to his side. She was stylish in a pale violet velvet top and slacks and white boots.
I especially liked the boots. I'd remember them and perhaps another timeâ¦
She took Isaac's arm in a firm grip. “Papa, you can't be on your high horse when there's been a murder. Come in, Mrs. Kathleen, and Isaac can tell you what happened.”
Kathleen was offered the most comfortable chair in the den. Evelyn put the TV on mute. Isaac joined his wife on the divan, clamped his hands above his knees. “I'll tell you, Mrs. Kathleen, I never been so surprised. First thing this morning, I saw somebody had been fooling around in my shed. I don't leave things any old which way. Everything has a place and everything is in its place. So when I found the wheelbarrow jammed up next to the shovelsâ”
It had never occurred to me to quiz Kathleen about her return of the wheelbarrow to the shed. I understood her panic and haste, but that hurried dumping of the wheelbarrow might be her undoing.
“âI checked to see if anything was missing. I can tell you I know what's where.” He looked puzzled. “I looked real good and nothing was missing. Everything else was there and where it should be, but, like I told that officer this afternoon, somebody'd had my wheelbarrow out and I know that for sure because there was some mud on the wheel and I'd just greased it good the other day and I don't put anything away dirty.” He nodded three times for emphasis. “Somebody took my barrow out and did I don't know what with it. I'd guess kids, but I don't see how they got into my shed. It was locked up like always when I left yesterday afternoon and locked again this morning, but somehow somebody got that barrow out and put it back. That seemed mighty odd to me. I went over to tell the rector, but he wasn't in his office. When I came home for lunch, Evelyn told me
she'd heard on TV about Mr. Murdoch being found shot in the cemetery. I called the police because it seemed to me they should know there was something odd going on around the church.” He glowered. “I didn't take kindly to it when that officer asked me about how Mr. Murdoch and I had words outside the parish hall on Monday. Turned out Mamie Pruitt couldn't wait to tell the police about me and Mr. Murdoch, but I told that officer to go and talk to Father Bill. Father Bill took my part just like he should. I got those groceries out of the pantry for the Carter family that live down the block from us. Mr. Carter, he's in the hospital, and Mrs. Carter, she lost her job, and there's five kids and no food for the table. Father Bill said of course I could take food for folks in need, but that mean-hearted Murdoch didn't want help going to anybody but people approved by some committee or other. And the policeman badgered me about keys. Who had keys except for me? Well, like I told him, there are keys here, there, and everywhere. The rector, he has keys to everything, and so do the senior warden and the junior warden and the Sunday school superintendent and the head of the Altar Guild. So it isn't like I was the only one that has keys. Then he wanted to know where I was between five and seven last evening and I told him it wasn't no business of his.” His eyes glowed with outrage.
Evelyn patted his stiff arm. “Now, Papa.” She turned bright eyes toward Kathleen. “Isaac was with me. He got home right on schedule at a quarter after five and we had a quick supper then we went over to our daughter Noreen's and took care of Ikie and Sue so Noreen and Bobby could go to a show.”
Kathleen's smile was reassuring. “I'm sure the officer didn't intend to offend you when he asked where you were yesterday. They ask everybody who might have been in the area.”
“See, Papa?” Evelyn patted his arm.
Isaac still frowned. “I don't hold with that policeman taking my barrow away. He gave me a receipt. I told him I needed my barrow
with all the stuff I'll be hauling away after Halloween's over, pumpkins and bales of hay and what all. I need my barrow. Mrs. Kathleen, can you get me my barrow back?”
Â
Kathleen hunched over the
wheel of her car. “If the police link that wheelbarrow to Daryl, Bill will be arrested.” She turned toward me, though, of course, the passenger seat appeared empty. In the wash of a streetlamp through the window, her face looked pale and desperate.
I agreed. Father Bill was definitely at risk. I was very much afraid for him. If only we knew where the chief's investigation was headed. There might be a way to find out if I were clever enough to remember what Bayroo had told me about computers. “I'll go to the police station and see if I can work the chief's computer. Bayroo showed me this afternoon.”
Kathleen's glance at me was pitying. “I don't think so, Bailey Ruth. You have to know the password and it takes some skill to find files.”
Files? I didn't want to ask Kathleen what that meant. I pictured a gray steel cabinet. “I know the password. Cougar.”
Kathleen's eyes narrowed. “If I could get in, I can find out what we need to know.” She pressed fingers tight against her temples for a moment. Her hands dropped. She asked quickly, “Where is his office?”
“City hall. Second floor.”
“Do the windows open?”
“I'll find out.” Before she could exclaim, I was in the chief's office. The windows were old-fashioned, with sashes. Back in the passenger seat, I reported, “Three windows on the south side. They open.”
“That's all I need. Here's what we'll do⦔
It was a good plan, a daring plan. I hoped it wasn't a foolhardy plan, but Kathleen was already shoving the car into gear and speeding toward the rectory and the supplies we would need.
Â
The chief's office was
chilly. I remembered my days in the mayor's office and the way he turned down the thermostat when he departed for the day. He never arrived until a good hour after the staff, so he wasn't concerned in winter with how long it took for the offices to get warm. I'd arrived to a frosty workplace often enough that I learned to nudge the thermostat up as soon as he was out the door. Now I found the thermostat, pushed it to seventy. I turned on the light.
At the window, I lifted the sash and leaned out.
Kathleen stood in the deep shadow of an old cottonwood. In her witch's robe, she was simply a darker splotch in the shadow.
I held out my hands. I missed the tennis ball on her first try. The second time I caught it. A cord was taped to the ball. Swiftly, I pulled hand over hand and the cord lifted the rope ladder she'd retrieved from the Boy Scout troop's storeroom in the church. I placed the hooks over the sill.
Kathleen wasn't even breathing hard when she climbed through the window to join me.
“Well done,” I praised.
“I did a rope course last summer.” She spoke softly. She glanced about, with one furtive look toward the door, and strode to the chief's desk. She slipped into his chair. In a moment the screen was bright.
I pointed at a little picture on the screen. “That one.”
Kathleen clicked, found a file for Murdoch, and in a moment we were looking at a list that included interviews with Mrs. Murdoch, Kirby Murdoch, Kathleen Abbott, Father Bill Abbott, and Isaac Franklin.
Kathleen clicked on
Isaac Franklin
. It was essentially the same information she had gained tonight but there was an addendum:
Det. Sgt. Price took custody Friday of the wheelbarrow from the shed behind St. Mildred's rectory. Sgt. Price noted cedar needles in a clump of mud on the wheel rim. There are no cedars on church property. Cedars are plentiful in the cemetery, where the victim was found. Moreover, an inspection of the barrow revealed dust balls that might correspond to those found on the decedent's suit coat. These discoveries suggest that the body was transported to the cemetery in the wheelbarrow from the vicinity of the church. Saturday morning a thorough search will be made of the church grounds and cemetery for any trace of the wheelbarrow's passage.
Kathleen moaned. “What if the wheelbarrow left tracks when I brought it back?”
I patted her shoulder. “I'll take care of it in the morning.” I'd be there at first light, but if I missed an impression, suspicion was going to be focused on Father Bill or Kathleen.
The little arrow darted up. The file went away. She opened the file on Father Bill.
Rev. Abbott refuses to reveal the reason for his quarrel on Thursday morning
A door banged open. Footsteps pounded across the floor toward Kathleen. A deep voice shouted, “Hands up.”
Kathleen scrambled out of the chair and raced toward the window.
Holding his gun straight ahead, gripping it with both hands, a policeman thudded after her.
I shoved the chair with all my might. It slammed into him and he fell, the gun clattering to the floor.
Grabbing the gun, I raced to the window, tossed it far into the night.
The policeman scrambled to his feet. He shoved the chair out of his way.
Kathleen reached the ground. I unhooked the rope ladder, dropped it down. I pulled down the window with a resounding smack.
The policeman stopped and gazed in disbelief at the closed window.
I swooped past him to the glowing screen. It would be disastrous if the chief knew we'd been into those files. I didn't have time to figure out how to turn it off. I reached the back of the machine, saw a dizzying array of cords. Perhaps if I pulled out oneâ¦or severalâ¦
The machine made a noise like a fish swallowing.
But it would certainly be apparent that someone had meddled. Quickly, I reinserted plugs.
Crackle. Hiss.
There was an odd sound as if the machine quivered in its depths.
The policeman swung toward the computer. I applauded his bravery as he pelted around the desk, then jerked to a stop. He stared. At nothing, of course.
He looked at the small empty space between the back of the computer and the wall.
I wasn't there. I stood staring at the computer. I felt true distress when I saw the black emptiness of the screen. I hoped the damage was not irreversible.
The policeman backed away from the empty space, then whirled and pounded toward the door.
I touched the black screen, but there was no flicker of color.
Perhaps I'd done enough for tonight.
I
tried to be quiet as a mouse.” Bayroo sat on the petit point ottoman with her knees tucked under her chin. “I hope I didn't wake you up. I brought breakfast.” She pointed at an enameled tray. “Blueberry muffins and oatmeal. Mom thought I fixed it for me and she didn't see me add a mug of coffee and an extra bowl and plate. She's really frazzled. The Spook Bash is today, and she's already over at the church.” Bayroo grinned. “I've been thinking wakeup thoughts, like âAuntie Grand, it's almost eight o'clock and I'm so excited I feel like I could fly if I tried.'”
She jumped up, closed her eyes, scrunched her face. “Maybe if I hold my breath and flap my arms.” She lifted from the floor, thumped down. “I jumped,” she confessed, “but I still feel like flying.”
Eight o'clock. Chief Cobb had ordered a search of the church grounds and the cemetery this morning. I swung upright in a panic, rushed to the window. No police cars were parked in the back drive orâI craned to seeâthe visible portion of the church parking lot.
Bayroo was at my side, her face concerned. “Is something wrong?”
“Everything's fine. But I have to go out soon.” I smiled and gave
her a good-morning hug, then held her at arm's length. “My, you look nice.”
Her cheeks turned bright pink. “Do I look too special?” She fingered the top button on her crisp blue-striped blouse. Navy corduroy slacks were tucked into soft white boots.
I liked Bayroo's white boots, just as I'd liked the ones I'd seen yesterday. They added a bright note to a cloudy fall day. “You look perfect. Casual but nice.”
She brushed back a swath of fiery-red hair. “I hope Travis doesn't think I'm a carrottop like that awful Jason Womble. He sits behind me in math, and whenever he has to pass a paper or anything he says, âHere you are, Carrottop. Better watch out for monster rabbits.'”
I laughed.
Bayroo didn't join in. Her eyes flashed. “Jason's mean.”
I reached over, gently touched a flaming curl. “Next time tell him he's color-blind. You aren't a carrottop, you're a Titian redhead, and there are paintings to prove it.”
“Titian?” She looked at me doubtfully.
“Titian,” I said firmly. “The famous Italian painter. He loved to paint models with red-gold hair just like yours. Check out an art book from the library, show Jason what's what.”
“Titian. Oh, I'll do it. Thank you, Auntie Grand.” She was at the table, lifting the covers from the cereal bowls. “I brought real cream. Mom says her family always had real cream with oatmeal. And lots of brown sugar.”
We sat down and I continued the family tradition by spooning two tablespoons of brown sugar and pouring a generous splash of cream. “Thanks for bringing up breakfast.” It was an auspicious beginning to the day. Everything was certain to come right. I felt it in my bones. Or would have, had I had bones. In any event, being with Bayroo was a good start.
I poked a chunk of butter into the warm center of the blueberry muffin.
Bayroo clapped her hands. “I love watching a muffin float in the air.”
I was starved. “Not for long.” I finished the muffin. “You look excited.”
Her thin face was eager but uncertain. “I have the cake ready to take to Travis's house. He said I could come this morning and I want to go there more than anything. But what if he thinks I'm one of those irritating fans who won't leave celebrities alone? I mean, I don't really know him and he's here to visit his aunt and maybe I should just put the cake on the porch with a note. Would that be better? Then he'll know I really think he's swell, but I'm not trying to horn in. I mean, he has to know Lucinda and I were hanging out around his aunt's house. Lucinda was at the other end of the block and I was in the pine grove.” She looked at me earnestly. “Don't tell Mom. We aren't supposed to go in the preserve by ourselvesâgirls, I mean, especially after dark. But it wasn't quite dark and I had to have somewhere where I could watch for him and Lucinda didn't see him because he came from my direction.” She finished in a rush. “I don't want him to think I'm a hanger-on.”
Bayroo had no inkling how beautiful she was, her red-gold hair shining in the sunlight, her freckled face kind and hopeful, bright and fresh in what were almost certainly her newest casual clothes.
“He'll think you're a nice new friend who wants his birthday to be special. It wouldn't be at all friendly to leave the cake with a note. You march right up to his aunt's front door and knock on it.” I raised my hand in a fist, pretended to knock. “I promise you it's the right thing to do.”
“You're sure?” She looked at me as if to a fount of wisdom.
“Positive.” If only I were as positive of my course this morning.
“Okay. I'll do it. If I can hide in the preserve when it's getting dark”âfor an instant her eyes were wide with memory that surely wasn't pleasant, then they shone again with happinessâ“I can do anything.” She absently spooned her oatmeal in a dreamy reverie.
I finished my muffin, hurriedly drank coffee, delighting in the bitter undertone of chicory. It was time to go to work. I scarcely gave a thought to my costume. Well, perhaps that wasn't quite accurate. I took a quick peek in one of the catalogs I'd brought from the sewing room and chose a royal-purple velour jacket and slacks with a rose silk blouse and purple scarf. And white boots. No one would see except Bayroo, but a woman has to feel at her best when she sets out to destroy evidence.
Â
I went straight to
the cemetery. Thursday night we'd followed a gravel path, then crossed the end of the paved church parking lot. However, we'd trundled over a patch of dirt to reach the pavement near the mausoleum. Last night I'd used a pine bough to erase those tracks. Had I missed any?
The breeze was chilly though the sun shone brightly. I thought of a short white cashmere coat with oversize purple buttons and immediately felt much more comfortable as well as stylish.
Despite a bright blue sky, the cemetery was shadowy beneath the overhanging limbs of sycamores, maples, sweet gums, and Bradford pears. Some leaves still clung, but mounds of red and gold and purplish leaves were banked against headstones by the erratic wind. Three big cedars lined the path near the mausoleum.
I found a wheelbarrow trail a few feet beyond the spot where we'd left Daryl. Quickly, I smoothed over the narrow furrow, my fingers brushing against cedar needles. I'd just satisfied myself that the area near the mausoleum was clear of wheel tracks when three police cars pulled up and stopped on the other side of the mausoleum.
Hurriedly, I zoomed in ever-widening circles until I reached the fluttering yellow tape that marked the crime scene. So far so good.
Anita Leland and the young man who had helped secure the scene Thursday night led the way. “I'll check inside the tape. Jake, start outside the tape, look between here and the church. Harry, go fifty yards east, then fifty west.” The search party fanned out, scanning the ground.
Stocky Jake began his search just past the breeze-stirred tape, head down, expression intent. I sped ahead of him. Jake and I spotted a deep gouge in a depression about twenty yards from the marked-off area. The track was on a straight line from the mausoleum to the church parking lot. “Yo,” he shouted. “Found it.”
Immediately Anita and Harry joined him. Anita sighted a line leading to the church parking lot. “Okay, one of us on each side, move slowly, take your time⦔ She stuck small yellow flags on either side of tracks as they were found. The search party took on an Easter-egg-hunt atmosphere, excited shouts erupting as the unmistakable path of the careening barrow was discovered.
I hovered overhead, but there was no opportunity to erase the damning evidence. I'd not worried about the wheelbarrow when Kathleen assured me she'd returned it to the shed, but I hadn't calculated the path she'd taken when she dashed away from the mausoleum. Unfortunately, Kathleen had ignored the gravel path and headed straight for the rectory backyard.
Anita's fair face was flushed with excitement. She hurried across the parking lot. Perhaps most damning of all was the intermittent trail in the rectory backyard leading directly to the shed. Flags sprouted. Anita stood next to the shed and used her cell phone. “Send the crime van. We've got a fresh path, clear as can be.”
I envisioned a grim sequence of events: the rectory wheelbarrow tagged in evidence, the wheelbarrow linked to the crime scene, further consideration of the unexplained dust ball laden with cat fur, Father Bill questioned again, now with greater suspicion.
If Kathleen hadn't flung Daryl's cell phone into the lake, Chief Cobb would have many more suspects. Walter Carey committed fraud. Irene Chatham stole from the collection plate. Kirby was furious with his father over his treatment of Lily Mendoza. Cynthia Brown was pregnant and desperate. I suspected that Daryl's secretary knew more than she had revealed about her boss's departure for the church. But perhaps most significant, last night when I'd talked to Kirby's lovely Lily, she'd been shocked that his gun was missing.
Where was Kirby's gun? When had it gone missing?
Â
The windowed alcove overlooked
a backyard that would be spectacular in the spring, dogwood and redbuds surrounding a pond with water lilies. A breeze stirred autumn leaves that fluttered to the ground.
Judith Murdoch peered out the window. She wore a black blouse, dark gray slacks, black shoes. She stood stiff and straight.
A barefoot Kirby hunched over his plate at the breakfast-room table. His gray sweatshirt and pants were fuzzy and ragged. A stubble of beard shadowed his face. Uncombed hair bunched in tangles. He held a mug of coffee, but the Danish on the plate before him was untouched. Red-rimmed eyes stared forlornly at his mother. “Mom, I want to talk to you about Thursday.”
Judith turned to face him. Fear flickered in her eyes, fear and grief and despair. “You were with Lily Thursday night.”
He put down the mug. “Mom, I sawâ”
She broke in, her voice harsh. “Kirby, promise me you'll tell the police you were with Lily.”
The doorbell rang.
Judith looked toward the hall, wavered on her feet.
Kirby pushed back his chair. “I'll take care of it, Mom. I'll take care of everything.” He was at her side, gripping her arm.
The bell pealed again.
Kirby steered his mother to the window seat. “Sit down and rest. I'll see about it.” He gave a worried backward glance as he hurried into the hallway.
When the door opened, Chief Cobb's deep voice easily carried to the breakfast room. “Good morning, Kirby. If you have a moment, I have some questions about your movements Thursday.”
Judith pushed to her feet, rushed to the hall.
I followed and stood by the waist-tall Chinese vase near the entry to the living room.
Judith clasped her hands so tightly the fingers blanched. “He's told you everything he knows. Can't you leave us alone? We have family coming. We have to plan the funeral. There's so much to do.”
Kirby glanced from the frowning chief to his mother. “It's okay, Mom. Go upstairs and rest. I'll talk to the chief.” Kirby touched her arm. “Please.”
Judith glared at the chief. “Kirby doesn't know anything about what happened to his father. Nothing.” Her voice was shrill.
The chief rocked back on his heels, his heavy face determined. “Sorry to intrude, Mrs. Murdoch, but I have a duty to investigate your husband's murder. He was shot with a twenty-two.” Cobb turned toward Kirby. “You were target-practicing with a twenty-two Thursday afternoon on the river bottom.” It was a statement, not a question.
Kirby jammed a hand through his tangled hair. “Yeah. I shoot most Thursdays. When I finished, I put the gun in the trunk of my car.”
“Where is the gun now?”
Kirby didn't answer.
Chief Cobb pressed him. “Yesterday you said it must have been stolen from the trunk of your car.”
“Yeah.” He stared at the floor.
I felt a chill. He was trying not to look at his mother. Kirby thought she'd taken the gun. Why did he suspect her?
The questions came fast.
“What time did you put it in the trunk?”
“About two-thirty.”
“Where was the car between two-thirty and five?”
“Parked in the lot next to my girlfriend's apartment.”
“Locked?”
Kirby gnawed at his lower lip. He started to speak, stopped, finally spoke. “Yeah. It was locked.”
His mother drew in a sharp breath.
Chief Cobb was somber. “Where were you shortly after five
P.M
. Thursday?”
Judith took two quick steps, stood between the chief and her son. “He was with his girlfriend. He's already told you.”
“He can tell me again. Here or downtown. This time he can tell me the truth. He was seen outside his father's office shortly after five o'clock.” Chief Cobb's gaze was cold. “Your choice, son.”
Kirby swallowed. “Yeah, I was there.”
Judith gave a strangled cry. “You can't do this. I'll call our lawyer.”
Chief Cobb's eyes narrowed. “I'm seeking information, Mrs. Murdoch. I'm not making an accusation. It looks like you think your son had something to do with his father's death. Are you afraid of what your son is going to say?”
Judith looked tortured. “You're twisting my words.”
Kirby jammed his hands into the pockets of his sweatpants. “I went to Dad's office because I had to talk to him.”
“You followed him out of the parking lot?”
Kirby's face ridged. He took a deep breath. “Yeah. I started after him.” He shot a desperate, grieved look at his mother, moved uneasily on his feet. “Dad drove to the church.” He put out the words with effort.
“I waited until he parked. I caught him just outside the church. I told him what a louse he was for getting Lily fired from her job. It was a rotten thing to do. He said he'd make sure she never got another job.”