14 The Chocolate Clown Corpse (17 page)

BOOK: 14 The Chocolate Clown Corpse
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The payroll took me an hour and a half. Joe helped by writing the names on the pay envelopes. And as soon as I stuffed the last envelope he got us each a bowl of ice cream.

I ate mine, then asked him an important question. “Joe, is anybody going to believe Emma?”

“I think it’s unlikely. I’m having trouble doing it myself.”

“The problem is that she’s so meek and mild. But Hogan tells me that even the meek and mild can kill if they’re pushed hard enough.”

“True. To me there are important questions. Whatever happened on the day Moe died, does Emma
believe
that she killed him? And if she does believe it, is her belief rational?”

“I spent quite a lot of time with her today, and she seemed
perfectly rational to me. But right at this point a large proportion of the population seems to think I’m not rational myself, because nobody believes I saw someone try to kill her.”

“Emma sure backs you up.” Joe squeezed my hand and grinned at me. “And I believe you.”

“You’d better. But the fact that you have to tell me you believe me means you have doubts.”

“I’m sure you saw the clown in her room, Lee. I’m sure you interpreted his actions as a threat against Emma.”

“Yeah, yeah. But people who didn’t see him leaning on that pillow, who didn’t see her kicking . . .”

I choked up and quit talking.

Joe moved his chair close to mine and put his arms around me. He didn’t say anything either. He just held me.

“Thanks,” I said. “Thanks for believing my not very believable story.”

Joe hugged me tighter. “Actually, we’re faced with several unbelievable stories.”

“Emma’s and mine. Who else?”

“Maybe ‘contradictory’ would be the best word. Emma says she shoved Moe down, then left in the family car.”

“The only unbelievable part of that is that she could shove him hard enough to kill him. And that’s not impossible.”

“Yes, just unbelievable. Then there’s Chuck’s version, the statement he made.”

I sat up. “I’ve never heard Chuck’s story, except in a general way. What does he say happened?”

“He doesn’t mention Emma. He says he and his dad drove to the cottage in Chuck’s car. He was inside when his dad confronted Royal Hollis. Chuck heard the altercation and ran out
to find Hollis heading for the woods and his dad lying on the drive, dead or dying.”

“That’s completely different from Emma’s story. What is Hollis’ story?”

Joe shook his head. “It’s rather confused, I’m afraid. It boils down to ‘he took my shoes.’ But he denies hitting Moe.”

“His story matches Harry Vandercool’s, I guess.”

“Yeah. Mr. Vandercool says Hollis took off for the woods at least fifteen minutes before he went over and found Chuck kneeling beside Moe’s body.”

“So Hollis did have time to double back and tangle with Moe again. But, Joe, none of these stories explains why anyone felt it necessary to try to kill Emma, the way the clown and the fake nurse did. A second crime of violence in the same family just can’t be unrelated.”

“I guess it could be, but I’m like you. I don’t believe it. But we know Chuck wasn’t the clown who tried to smother Emma. He and Lorraine claim they were working at the shop all day.”

“Right. I saw them as I left for Holland, and later on Dolly Jolly talked to them. And I’ll take her word anytime.”

Joe and I sat side by side, considering for at least a full minute. Then Joe squeezed my hand and stood up.

“I give up,” he said. “No more thinking about it tonight. Let’s go to bed.” He waggled his eyebrows at me.

I waggled mine back. “Sounds like a good idea.”

We left the dishes on the table, and we didn’t listen to the messages on the phone, and we didn’t read the mail, or do any of the other routine things that bedtime usually involves. We locked the back door and threw the bedspread on the floor, but that was all.

Joe apparently set the alarm before he went to sleep, because it went off at six thirty.

“It’s not morning already, is it?” I asked.

“I’m afraid so. I’m going to get in the shower. You don’t need to get up yet.”

I rolled over and buried my head under the pillow as Joe left the bedroom. But I was edging into consciousness. The thought of the dirty ice cream dishes began to prey on my mind. I got up, put on a robe, and went out to the dining room to organize things. The day was guaranteed to be a doozy.

After I moved the ice cream dishes to the sink, I glanced through the mail. Nothing but ads. The local newspaper, the
Warner Pier Weekly Gazette
, had also been delivered the previous day. When I picked it up, a flier for Walmart fell out. I glanced at it.

And on the back page was an ad for men’s hair color.

I felt as if I’d been struck by lightning. I grabbed up the ad and ran to the bathroom. I banged on the door, yelling.

“Joe! Joe! I know who tried to kill Emma!”

Chocolate Chat

In ancient days chocolate was given to Aztec warriors to encourage battle success. It was sometimes compressed into wafers so it would be easy to carry while traveling.

But it was also linked to love. Scientists believe this is because it contains phenylethylamine. This chemical is an endorphin, and endorphins produce feelings of happiness or even euphoria. Like being in love, naturally.

The famed eighteenth-century courtesan Madame du Barry reportedly plied her lovers with chocolate, and a heart-shaped box of chocolates is the dream of many teenaged girls. But only if it comes from someone special.

Legendary lover Casanova supposedly recommended chocolate over champagne as an “elixir of love,” and as late as 1905 a British magazine urged women to be cautious in indulging in romances, chocolate, and novels, warning that such things could lead to moral downfall.

Chapter 21

Joe opened the bathroom door enough to get his head out. He had wrapped a towel around his waist, but his hair was dripping. “What’s wrong?”

“Nothing! I mean, I figured out who it was!”

“Is the house on fire?”

“No! But I’ve got to share this news!”

“Lee! There’s a draft, and I’m freezing. Either come in or stay out, okay?”

“Sorry!” I went in and shut the door behind myself. “But I really want to tell you!”

Joe turned back to the sink. He picked up a hand towel. “What brought this on?”

“An ad for men’s hair color. It fell out of the
Gazette
.”

“And you rushed in here to tell me there’s no need for me to get gray hair?”

“No! When I saw the ad I recognized the man who tried to poison Emma.”

“He was in the ad?”

“Don’t tease!” I quickly recapped the scene in the hospital
room, when a large man in scrubs came in and gave Emma a pill. “Which she only pretended to take,” I said.

“And you thought it was some sort of poison.”

“Well, not at that moment. I would have jumped out and yelled if I had thought that. But Emma had quit taking the medication they had her on, so she just pretended to take the pill. After the guy was gone she spit it into a paper cup. I stuck a couple of Kleenex in the top to keep it from falling out and wrapped it in a rubber glove.”

“Have you still got it?”

“It’s in my purse. My main concern at that moment was getting Emma out of the hospital. But I got a good look at the guy who brought it in, and he seemed familiar.”

“When you saw him while you were hiding in the closet.”

“Yes. He had home-dyed black hair.”

“Home-dyed? How could you tell?”

“Because I’ve hung around beauty shops a lot. I know what professionally colored black hair looks like and what home-did black hair looks like. If somebody does it at home, either a man or a woman, they nearly always mess it up. Hair colored in those dark shades by an amateur looks harsh. And dull. And lifeless.”

“Dead hair?”

“Right.”

“But Lee, how many hundreds of men in Holland dye their hair? And most of them probably do it at home. How would that tell you who the guy was?”

“There’s more to the story, Joe. Do you remember that I told you about seeing that man from P.M. Development? The one Tilda showed the Clowning Around shop to? He had odd coloring.”

“He had dyed black hair?”

“No! He had prematurely gray hair—almost white.”

“You’ve lost me here. How does a guy with white hair equal a guy with black hair?”

“Because they both had black eyebrows. The guy at the development company had white hair but heavy black eyebrows.”

“Like a skunk?”

“Not striped. But the contrast between the hair and the eyebrows was very noticeable. So if a guy with white hair and dark eyebrows wanted to look different—say for a security camera—what would he do?”

Joe grinned. “He might bleach his eyebrows.”

“You’re right! He might. But it would be much easier to buy some hair dye at Walmart and color the white hair black. And as soon as he was finished with his need for black hair, he could wash the dye out.”

“It’s that easy?”

“Yes. If you use the right product. When I was in high school I played a fortune-teller in a skit, and my friends and I decided I needed black hair. I couldn’t afford a professional job, so they helped me color it. We bought something at the drugstore. And the day after the skit I washed it out.”

“It’s interesting to think of you as an exotic brunette.”

“It took all the water in the hot water tank to get the black color out, and then I still had a couple of green streaks. But it can be done.”

“That’s not much to go on, Lee.”

“I feel sure the so-called nurse was the man from the development company. And he gave Emma the pill I think was poisonous.”

“But we don’t know that it was.”

“Right. Some law officer will have to get the pill analyzed. And that means I’ve got to tell somebody this whole story.”

Joe rewrapped his bath towel around his waist. Then he began to rub his hair with the smaller towel. He was looking at me steadily.

“Lots of luck finding the right person to tell,” he said.

“I know,” I said. “I guess that could be a problem.”

I watched Joe until he finished toweling his hair. He ran a comb through it.

I sighed. “You have great hair.”

“Thanks. I don’t plan to color it anytime soon, either professionally or at home.”

“Good. I’ll make coffee.”

I went into the kitchen and began to fix breakfast. Watching Joe do his hair might be a fun way to start the day—love those shoulders!—but the task I needed to accomplish was going to be a challenge.

After the fiasco when I chased the clown through the hospital, leaving three law enforcement organizations convinced that I had made up the whole adventure as a publicity stunt, I needed to keep a low profile. But instead, what had I done? I’d kidnapped a patient from the hospital, and I believed I’d witnessed a new attempt on her life. And the potential victim now claimed to be a murderer herself. The whole thing was a confused mess.

I could tell the world about the episode in the hospital—take an ad out in the
Chicago Tribune
and go on
Good Morning America
—and still nobody in a responsible position was likely to believe that anybody had tried to kill Emma. And they also would never believe that I had identified that person.

I put coffee and water in the coffeepot and plugged it in. I
got out the toaster. I put last night’s ice cream debris in the dishwasher. In other words, I tried to get on with life. But none of this routine helped me figure out how to handle my problem.

My problem was telling some law enforcement officer that I was convinced that the man I’d seen at P.M. Development was the one who had come into Emma’s room. I also had to convince someone he had tried to kill her. And that he could well have been the clown who tried to suffocate her earlier. He was the right size.

My first impulse had been to ask Joe how I should handle it. His skills would be useful in accomplishing this, while mine weren’t much help. But as I had watched him towel his hair dry I had realized I couldn’t bug him about it.

Joe had his own problem, a different problem. He had to get legal help for Emma. That had to be his first responsibility, not only to Emma, but to his own client.

If Emma told her story right, his client—Royal Hollis—might be completely exonerated. If she told it wrong, Joe might wind up accused of getting a witness to lie. My dad, a Texas fisherman, describes an unpredictable person as “about as stable as a bass boat in a high wind on a big lake.” That might apply to Emma.

Whether Emma was mentally unstable was beyond me, but she could certainly be made to appear unstable. And she was certainly easy to influence. By her own account it hadn’t been hard for Chuck to convince her she should withhold her story about shoving Moe.

If I thought law enforcement wasn’t going to believe me . . . Well, my problem was nothing compared with the one Emma had. And Emma’s problem was Joe’s problem. I needed to handle this one myself.

But if I wanted to tell some law enforcement officer who Emma’s attacker had been, which cop should I tell?

Hospital security? I shook my head. They wouldn’t have the authority to do anything about it. The Holland police force? I shook my head harder at the idea of talking to the two guys who had tossed me out of the hospital. I wanted to talk to a detective, not some mere patrolman. And if I wandered into the Holland Police Headquarters and asked to see a detective—well, I’d have to start from go and explain the whole situation. It would take hours. That would be a last resort.

No, Clancy Pike was the best. Clancy scared me, but at least he knew who I was, and he knew the background of Emma, Moe, Moe’s kids, and Moe’s death. He wasn’t likely to actually bite me. And if the Holland police were needed, Clancy would surely be able to refer me to someone in Holland who could help.

So when Joe sat down at the breakfast table, I took a deep breath and spoke. “I’ll try to talk to Clancy Pike as soon as he can see me.”

Joe blinked a couple of times. “About the guy with the dyed hair? If you wait until afternoon, I might be able to go with you.”

“No. First, I’ve just got to do it myself. Second, you need to concentrate on Emma and her story.”

“I need to help my client, Royal Hollis. And today that means I have to help Emma make her story credible. So she needs a lawyer to look out for her interests. If nobody believes her, she won’t help Hollis at all.”

Yes, my problem was quite different from Joe’s, even though both involved Emma. We didn’t discuss it further. What else was there to say?

As soon as Joe had eaten a piece of toast, he got on the phone. I could hear him talking to his mentor, Mac McKay, as I loaded the dishwasher. By the time I got out of the shower, he’d left.

I was on my own.

I put on an outfit that made me feel authoritative—a black wool skirt and sweater with knee-high boots. No flannel-lined jeans today. I added a silver chain belt and a red scarf. I combed my hair into a businesslike bun. I put the TenHuis paychecks into a manila envelope and headed for the office. As soon as I got the checks passed out, I’d call Clancy Pike.

And this time he wasn’t going to intimidate me. I was determined.

After I’d handled the office details, I called and arranged an appointment with Clancy for ten thirty. Then I got out my notepad and made an outline of what I needed to tell him. This was not going to be a good time for a tangled tongue or confused thoughts.

I was in the Warner Pier police station at ten twenty-five. Clancy Pike, naturally, didn’t show until ten forty. I suspected this was a ploy to make me nervous, so I stiffened my spine and vowed not to let that work. I said hello when Clancy walked into the station, but I remained seated in the visitor’s area until he called me into his office.

When I closed the door behind me, Clancy raised his eyebrows nearly to the top of his forehead, or where his forehead would have ended if he hadn’t completely shaved his head.

He gestured toward a chair. “I’m sure you’ll be happy to learn that Mrs. Davidson called home last night.”

“Oh! Yes, I am happy to hear that.”

His voice was completely lacking in irony as he continued. “She said a friend picked her up, and that she’s fine.”

“That’s wonderful.”

“Yes. Of course, we’d rather talk to her face to face.” He stared at me, his face completely blank. “Now, what can I do for you?”

It was my turn. I started with a deep breath.

“I realized something important this morning, and law enforcement needs to know about it. But I don’t want to be irregular—I mean, irresponsible!—I don’t want to be irresponsible about making accusations.”

So much for not getting my tongue tangled.

Clancy nodded.

“First,” I said, “I have a confession to make. Not to a crime. But yesterday I did find the hospital room occupied by Emma Davidson.”

“How did you do that?”

“She had called our house and left her phone number for Joe, and I used that number to find her room. Emma begged for Joe to come talk to her. But he was out of town and couldn’t get there. So he asked me to visit her.”

I continued the story, up to the point that the man with dyed hair came in and gave Emma a pill.

“And this morning I realized who that man was. I think his name is Philip Montague. He is the man from P.M. Development, the man whose company is bidding on the Clowning Around property next door to us. I saw him over there with the Realtor.”

Clancy looked skeptical, and I couldn’t blame him. “He didn’t just resemble that man?” he asked.

“I believe it was the same man.”

“And you thought he gave Mrs. Davidson something harmful?”

“Right. And I have it here in my purse.”

I produced the rubber glove containing the paper cup with the pill.

That’s where we began. And half an hour later, that’s about where we ended. Of course, Clancy had only my word that the pill was the same one the fake nurse had given Emma. Cops put great importance on what they call “chain of custody,” proof that evidence was passed from one person to another. I had no chain of custody at all. Clancy knew this better than I did, and we didn’t discuss it.

But Clancy asked lots of questions, ending with “Do you have any idea why this P.M. Development guy would try to harm Emma Davidson?”

“No idea at all. I only saw him two other times—once walking by him and the second time driving by him in a car. I know nothing about him, and I know of no connection he has with Emma or with the Davidson family. It’s crazy! But I am convinced that’s who it was. And I am convinced he tried to harm Mrs. Davidson.”

I shut up then. If I said any more, I’d be admitting that I helped Emma leave the hospital. I wasn’t ready to do that.

I hadn’t expected my interview with Clancy Pike to be friendly, and it hadn’t been. But he hadn’t yelled at me, and I hadn’t yelled at him. I hadn’t broken down and cried. And he didn’t hold me for further questioning, though he was frowning as I got up to leave.

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