Just Murdered (24 page)

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Authors: Elaine Viets

Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Cozy, #Women Sleuths, #Amateur Sleuth, #General

BOOK: Just Murdered
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Helen locked her door to keep Phil out—and herself in.
She longed to run out and throw herself into his arms. She missed him so much. Helen felt like he had been torn from her—no, amputated without an anesthetic—and she was bleeding all over everything.
Margery said she needed courage to forgive Phil and learn to trust men. Helen thought she needed an eraser to get rid of her awful memories. They replayed endlessly in her mind: Once again, she saw Kendra’s dyed red hair, cheap short skirt, and catlike smile as she clung to Helen’s man.
And Phil—he was standing in his bedroom like a gigged frog.
Let’s not forget your role, Helen told herself. She’d popped in half-naked and yelled “surprise” like a hooker at a bachelor party.
Helen had worked herself into a meltdown rage when a blue envelope came skidding under her door. She opened it and read the note:
I love you,
it said.
Please let me help—Phil.
She crumpled the note into a ball and threw it against the wall. Thumbs jumped off the couch and batted it around the floor, doing flips and leaps. Helen sat down for a moment in her turquoise Barcalounger to watch the big cat play.
She woke up at three A.M.
Ugh. She hated when she did that. Her face was greasy with old makeup. Her mouth was dry. It hardly seemed worth going to bed when she had to be up in another three hours, but Helen dragged herself to her bedroom.
As soon as she hit the mattress, she was wide-awake. Helen stared at the ceiling and thought of her champagne nights with Phil. What would he drink with Kendra: Ripple? Cold Duck? Mad Dog 20/20?
Finally she cried herself into a restless sleep.
The morning didn’t look any better and she looked worse. Helen winced when she glanced in the mirror. The bags under her eyes were prizewinners. She could haul bowling balls in them.
Helen fished two ice cubes out of the freezer, put them on her bags for a bit, then checked the mirror again.
Great. Now the bags were bright red. She looked like she had eye hives. Worse, her concealer didn’t stick well to semifrozen bags. She quit trying to paint over them and got dressed.
As she slipped on her right shoe, Helen felt something in the toe. She pulled out Phil’s crumpled note. Thumbs had dropped it in her shoe.
I love you. Please let me help—Phil.
I love you, too, she thought, but you can’t help me until you help yourself. I’ve been a fool, but so have you. I’ll have to save myself.
Helen wondered if Margery had talked with the homicide detectives yet. She’d better warn her. Helen knocked on her landlady’s door. It was opened by a fluffy old woman in pink hot pants. Her orange mules matched her hair. A snug green sweater bared her substantial midriff.
Helen blinked. The woman was kind of cute in a surreal way. She reminded Helen of a punked-out Miss Marple. She even had the same soft, dithery voice.
“Oh, you must want Margery,” the woman said. “I’ll get her. You just wait here.”
Margery came out in a purple bathrobe, trailing a cloud of cigarette smoke. She moved like a hibernating bear that had been awakened two months early. Last night’s champagne must have taken its toll.
“Another hard night of dancing with Warren?” Helen said. “Did you two go out on the town after I went to bed?”
“I’ve had my last dance with that old coot,” Margery said. “We’ve got problems. Elsie’s in trouble and it’s Warren’s fault.”
Elsie’s middle bulged a bit, but Helen was pretty sure she wasn’t pregnant.
“What happened?”
Elsie folded her liver-spotted hands on her pink lap and looked like a contrite schoolgirl. “I signed a bad contract,” she said in her fluttery voice. “Margery’s going to help me get out of it.”
“So far, I haven’t been much help,” Margery said.
“I should have listened to you before I signed,” Elsie said. “You were afraid Warren ran one of those dance studios that signed people up for lifetime contracts.”
“Which at our age is about six months.” Margery lit another cigarette. It glowed like a red eye. Helen felt there were enough of those in the room already.
“I checked like she told me,” Elsie said. “It was only a two-year contract. But I should have read the rest of it. I couldn’t make any sense out of that legal gobbledygook. My Jim used to do that for me. Now that he’s gone, I’m not so good at coping.”
“The contract was only for two years,” Margery said. “But the payments were two thousand dollars a month for twenty-four months.”
Helen was stunned. “Two grand a month for dancing lessons? That’s a mortgage payment.”
“Elsie signed a contract for forty-eight thousand dollars in dance lessons.”
“I had no idea it was so expensive until I got the first statement,” Elsie said. “I had two free lessons. Then I paid only fifty dollars for the first month. I thought I was paying fifty dollars a month for two years.”
“That’s outrageous,” Helen said.
“It’s an old scam,” Margery said. “I checked it out on the Internet.”
“You have a computer?” Helen said.
“Welcome to the twenty-first century,” Margery said. “Got my own Hotmail account, too. I use the library’s computers. Best time to go is early afternoon. All the old farts are napping and the kids are still in school. I did a search on the Net and found out how these phony dance schools operate. They give the victim some cheap dance lessons, sign her up for a contract, and then she learns she’s committed to thousands of dollars.”
“How do they hide those outrageous prices in the contract?” Helen asked.
“They don’t bother,” Margery said. “Con artists know people rarely read the fine print. At our age, we can’t see it without a magnifying glass. That’s how they got Elsie for nearly fifty grand.”
“I don’t have that kind of money any more,” Elsie said. “I made some bad investments.” She dropped her voice and said the dreaded words: “Enron. And World-C om.”
Helen shuddered. She’d done the same thing. “That’s terrible. You need a lawyer.”
Elsie hung her head. “My son is a lawyer. That’s the problem. Milton will find out if I go to one. He knows everyone. Fort Lauderdale is such a small town. He’s been trying to get me into one of those assisted-living facilities. If Milton knew what a fool I was with those dance lessons, he’d put me in a home for sure and get power of attorney over what’s left of my money.”
Elsie’s chins trembled. Her young clothes made her seem older and more helpless.
“Milt’s a bit of a stick,” Margery said, her cigarette glaring at Helen. “He wants his mom to put on a shawl and sit in a rocking chair.”
“He’s a good boy,” Elsie said, loyally.
“I didn’t say he wasn’t,” Margery said. “But Milt wore pin-striped diapers.”
“Takes after his father,” Elsie said. “Except Jim enjoyed my wild side. Said I had moxie. Milton says I embarrass him.”
“I warned you about wearing that leather miniskirt to his firm’s Christmas party,” Margery said.
“The legs are the last thing to go on a girl,” Elsie said. “Mine are still worth showing off.”
They were pretty good, Helen thought, but the thighs drooped a bit.
“We’ve got to help Elsie,” Margery said. “I introduced her to that crook. I’ll get her out of this if it’s the last thing I do. Elsie, you go on home. I need to think.”
Elsie tottered out on her orange mules.
“What do you want?” Margery snarled at Helen. “I know you didn’t come over to meet Elsie.”
“Were the police by to speak with you yesterday?”
“No, I was out all day with Warren, that son of a bugger. I drank champagne with him until two. What kind of trouble are you in now?”
“None,” Helen lied. Her voice went too high and Margery looked at her sharply. “The police are checking my alibi for the night of Desiree’s rehearsal dinner, that’s all.”
“You were with Phil from eleven o’clock on. He left about seven a.m.”
“Jeez. Were you watching?”
“I know everything that goes on here,” Margery said. “Peggy’s still dating her policeman, but I think that romance is about over, thank God. Those two would sneak down to the swimming pool at midnight and wake me up. Thought if they turned off the pool lights I wouldn’t know what they were doing in the water.”
Helen’s cheeks burned at this revelation about her friend.
“Cal is currently in Canada. He says he wants to spend Christmas with his grandchild, but he’s really worried about his residence dates. He needs to spend more time in his home country. No Canadian wants to lose that national health insurance.”
“Amazing,” Helen said.
“Oh, yeah. I know everything. Except that Warren rooked my friend with his dance lessons right under my nose. Are you working today?”
“One o’clock to six,” Helen said.
“Good,” Margery said. “Warren leaves about nine thirty to open his dance studio. You can wait with me until he’s gone. I have a passkey. We need to look at his apartment.”
Margery changed into purple shorts and red tennis shoes. “The rubber soles will give me traction if I have to run for it,” she said.
“What exactly are you expecting to find?” Helen asked.
“Something that will help me nail his crooked hide to the wall.”
They drank coffee in a heavy silence. At nine thirty-three, Warren went whistling down the walk to the parking lot, golden sun shining on his silver hair.
“What a waste,” Margery said. “There aren’t many men his age with their own hair and teeth, and this one turns out to be a con artist.”
At nine forty-five, Margery used her passkey to open 2C. Helen followed her into the furnished apartment. Like many bachelors, Warren wasn’t big on dusting, but the place was tidy. There were racetrack programs on the coffeetable, a coffee maker and a can of cashews on the kitchen counter. A jai alai schedule was posted on the fridge. Helen looked inside: deli turkey, hamburger buns, mustard, hot sauce, a jar of olives, and a bottle of champagne. The freezer had two frosted champagne glasses.
“The old geezer keeps it on ice all the time,” Margery said. “So much for our special night.”
“What?” Helen said.
“There’s no fool like an old fool,” Margery said, “and I don’t mean Elsie.”
The woman with the throaty laugh and the elegant French twist was gone forever, Helen thought sadly. Margery would never again dance with a man in the moonlight. Warren had committed a double crime: He’d stolen Elsie’s money and taken the last of Margery’s youth.
The two women searched for dance lesson contracts and other papers. “I haven’t turned up anything more incriminating than his grocery and gasoline receipts,” Helen said.
“Gas prices are a crime, but he didn’t commit it,” Margery said.
In the bedroom, Helen found a locked closet. “Ha,” she said. “He’s up to something, and he doesn’t want the women he’s dating to find it.”
“Dating,” Margery said. “That’s a nice old-fashioned word for what he’s been doing. I’ve got keys to the closets, too.”
Margery unlocked the closet door. They saw the heads—two of them. Helen gave a little shriek of surprise.
One foam head had a beautiful shock of silver hair. The other was empty.
“Well, I’ll be damned,” Margery said. “That pretty silver hair is a rug. I never guessed—and I ran my fingers through it.”
She turned the toupee over. On the inside were round metal eyelets. “He’s got an expensive one. The hooks are embedded right in his head. He attaches the toupee and gets the best fit.”
Helen winced. She could feel the hooks sticking out of her head.
Margery shoved the toupee in her pocket. “Got him. His ladies won’t think he’s such a stud when they see him with hooks in his bald head. I’m so happy about this, I feel like dancing.”
“Me, too,” Helen said.
“We’ll take my car, in case we need to make a quick getaway,” Margery said.
Warren’s Studio of the Dance was in a pink stucco storefront off Las Olas. Warren was waltzing a woman of about eighty around the room. They were both graceful dancers.
“He’s fun to watch, I’ll give him that,” Margery said. “He put me through my paces.” Helen could hear the layers of hurt and bitterness under her light words.
The studio was furnished with a couple of couches, a few potted palms, and photos of dancers from Fred and Ginger to Tommy Tune. There were black footprints painted on the floor in intricate patterns. Helen knew she’d fall over her feet if she ever tried them, but Warren and the dancing woman moved through the routines with practiced swiftness.
Margery wasn’t watching the couple. She was examining the framed items on the walls.
“Time’s up, Shirley!” Warren said when the music stopped. “See you next week.”
Shirley changed out of her ballroom shoes and headed for the door. Margery waited in the shadows until Shirley left.
When Warren saw her, he gave a glittering smile. “Margery! Have you come for those advanced lessons after all? A little rumba, maybe? Or a cha-cha?” He swiveled his hips expertly.
“Nope, this is going to be a cakewalk.” Margery whipped out the silver toupee.
“Margery! How could you? You stole that,” he said indignantly. “You entered my apartment illegally.”
“And you stole forty-eight thousand dollars from my friend, Elsie. You better tear up that contract.”
“I can’t. It’s a legal document. It’s way past the three-day cancellation period.”
“Dance studios are supposed to be registered with the state of Florida,” Margery said. “Your registration certificate should be prominently displayed up there with Fred and Ginger.”
“A minor oversight,” Warren said.
“Yeah, well, I’m overseeing this toupee.” She shook it like a dead rat. “I’ll come back for the other one and tear it off your bald head. Let’s see how attractive those gullible old biddies find you then.” Helen knew who the most gullible biddy was. Margery was gleefully destroying their moonlit nights.

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